Lymphotropic Virotherapy Engages DC and High Endothelial Venule Inflammation to Mediate CancerIn SituVaccination

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Abstract

Intratumor (IT) inoculation of the rhino:poliovirus chimera, PVSRIPO, yielded objective radiographic responses with long-term survival in 20% of patients with recurrent glioblastoma (rGBM). PVSRIPO infects dendritic cells (DCs) and sets up non-cytopathogenic viral (v)RNA replication, which triggers sustained type-I IFN (IFN-I) signaling and antitumor T cell priming. Here we identify IFN-I signaling in glioma-draining cervical lymph nodes (cLN) as a mediator of polio virotherapy. Transient IFN-I signaling after IT therapy was rescued by cervical perilymphatic injection (CPLI) of PVSRIPO, targeting cLN directly. Dual-site (IT+CPLI) PVSRIPO induced profound inflammatory reprogramming of cLN, enhanced vRNA replication and IFN-I signaling in DCs and High Endothelial Venules (HEV), augmented anti-glioma efficacy in mice, and was associated with T cell activation in rGBM patients. A Ph2 clinical trial of IT+CPLI PVSRIPO is ongoing (<ext-link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" ext-link-type="clintrialgov" xlink:href="NCT06177964">NCT06177964</ext-link>). This work implicates the lymphatic system as a novel virotherapy target and demonstrates the CPLI concept to complement brain tumor immunotherapy.

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