Targeted Irradiation and STAT3 Inhibition Reprogram the AML Microenvironment and Extend Survival: Toward Translational Immunoradiotherapy

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Purpose

Despite advances in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) therapy, relapses remain challenging. While AML is radiation-sensitive, total body irradiation (TBI) causes organ toxicities and activates tolerogenic/proangiogenic STAT3 signaling. CSI-2, a myeloid cell-targeted STAT3 inhibitor, promotes anti-leukemic immune responses but has limited efficacy against high disease burden. We investigated whether image-guided targeted marrow irradiation (TMI), which focuses radiation on leukemia sites while sparing critical organs, could synergize with CSI-2 to improve leukemia clearance and establish durable immunity.

Methods

Mice were intravenously engrafted with CMM-AML cells reaching 20–30% in bone marrow (BM) infiltration (moderate-to-high disease burden) before receiving IV-injections of CSI-2 (5mg/kg) with or without TMI. Fluorescently labeled CSI-2 biodistribution was assessed using flow cytometry and quantitative multiphoton microscopy. Survival was monitored for 3–4 months before evaluating BM composition using flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry.

Results

TMI significantly improved vascular permeability and scavenger receptor/TLR9-dependent uptake of CSI-2 by AML cells and leukemia-associated myeloid cells. Combined TMI/CSI-2 treatment more effectively reduced high leukemia burden than CSI-2 alone, achieving >80% survival at 120 days with increased CD8+ cytotoxic and CD4+ helper T cell infiltration. TMI/CSI-2-treated mice were protected from AML rechallenge suggesting that they developed protective immune memory. In an aggressive MLL-AF9 AML model, TMI/CSI-2 combination significantly extended survival compared to either monotherapy.

Conclusion

TMI/CSI-2 strategy represents a novel organ-sparing immunoradiotherapy that synergistically enhances leukemia clearance while promoting long-term protective immunity. These findings warrant further investigation of this strategy for high-burden or relapsed AML and provide the foundation for clinical translation.

Article activity feed