Sitravatinib potentiates immune checkpoint blockade in refractory cancer models

Wenting Du, Huocong Huang, Noah Sorrelle, Rolf A. Brekken

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

80 Scopus citations

Abstract

Immune checkpoint blockade has achieved significant therapeutic success for a subset of cancer patients; however, a large portion of cancer patients do not respond. Unresponsive tumors are characterized as being immunologically "cold," indicating that these tumors lack tumor antigen-specific primed cytotoxic T cells. Sitravatinib is a spectrum-selective tyrosine kinase inhibitor targeting TAM (TYRO3, AXL, MerTK) and split tyrosine-kinase domain-containing receptors (VEGFR and PDGFR families and KIT) plus RET and MET, targets that contribute to the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. We report that sitravatinib has potent antitumor activity by targeting the tumor microenvironment, resulting in innate and adaptive immune cell changes that augment immune checkpoint blockade. These results suggest that sitravatinib has the potential to combat resistance to immune checkpoint blockade and expand the number of cancer patients that are responsive to immune therapy.

Original languageEnglish (US)
JournalJCI Insight
Volume3
Issue number21
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2 2018

Keywords

  • Cancer immunotherapy
  • Drug therapy
  • Macrophages
  • Oncology
  • Therapeutics

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

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