Preconditioning Matters: Enhancing or Impairing Antitumor Immunity with DC Vaccines

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Abstract

Preconditioning regimens are essential for the success of adoptive cell therapies like CAR T-cells due to effects on the T-cell response, yet they are underexplored and generally absent from cancer vaccine clinical trials. To address this gap, we evaluated the impact of various preconditioning strategies on dendritic cell (DC) vaccine efficacy in a murine tumor model. Mice bearing syngeneic KP tumors expressing ovalbumin received preconditioning with low-dose radiation (LD RT; whole body or tumor only), cyclophosphamide, paclitaxel, LD RT plus cyclophosphamide, or no preconditioning, followed by administration of antigen-loaded DC1s. Tumor growth, survival, and antigen-specific CD8+ T-cell responses were assessed. LD RT preconditioning, whether whole body or tumor-directed, significantly enhanced vaccine-induced antitumor CD8+ T-cell responses and improved survival compared to DC vaccine alone and all other groups. Cyclophosphamide preconditioning reduced vaccine efficacy and negated the benefits of LD RT, while paclitaxel had no significant effect. Notably, whole-body LD RT induced the strongest antigen-specific T-cell response. These findings demonstrate that, similar to CAR T-cell therapy, preconditioning regimens can significantly influence cancer vaccine outcomes. Rational selection of preconditioning agents may either maximize or minimize the therapeutic potential of DC cancer vaccines, and should be considered carefully in clinical trials.

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