TY - JOUR
T1 - Interventional radiology for local immunotherapy in oncology
AU - Tselikas, Lambros
AU - Champiat, Stephane
AU - Sheth, Rahul A.
AU - Yevich, Steve
AU - Ammari, Samy
AU - Deschamps, Frederic
AU - Farhane, Siham
AU - Roux, Charles
AU - Susini, Sandrine
AU - Mouraud, Severine
AU - Delpla, Alexandre
AU - Raoult, Thibault
AU - Robert, Caroline
AU - Massard, Christophe
AU - Barlesi, Fabrice
AU - Soria, Jean Charles
AU - Marabelle, Aurelien
AU - De Baere, Thierry
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© American Association for Cancer Research.
PY - 2021/5/1
Y1 - 2021/5/1
N2 - Human intratumoral immunotherapy (HIT-IT) is under rapid development, with promising preliminary results and high expectations for current phase III trials. While outcomes remain paramount for patients and the referring oncologists, the technical aspects of drug injection are critical to the interventional radiologist to ensure optimal and reproducible outcomes. The technical considerations for HIT-IT affect the safety, efficacy, and further development of this treatment option. Image-guided access to the tumor allows the therapeutic index of a treatment to be enhanced by increasing the intratumoral drug concentration while minimizing its systemic exposure and associated on-target off-tumor adverse events. Direct access to the tumor also enables the acquisition of cancer tissue for sequential sampling to better understand the pharmacodynamics of the injected immunotherapy and its efficacy through correlation of immune responses, pathologic responses, and imaging tumor response. The aim of this article is to share the technical insights of HIT-IT, with particular consideration for patient selection, lesion assessment, image guidance, and technical injection options. In addition, the organization of a standard patient workflow is discussed, so as to optimize HIT-IT outcome and the patient experience.
AB - Human intratumoral immunotherapy (HIT-IT) is under rapid development, with promising preliminary results and high expectations for current phase III trials. While outcomes remain paramount for patients and the referring oncologists, the technical aspects of drug injection are critical to the interventional radiologist to ensure optimal and reproducible outcomes. The technical considerations for HIT-IT affect the safety, efficacy, and further development of this treatment option. Image-guided access to the tumor allows the therapeutic index of a treatment to be enhanced by increasing the intratumoral drug concentration while minimizing its systemic exposure and associated on-target off-tumor adverse events. Direct access to the tumor also enables the acquisition of cancer tissue for sequential sampling to better understand the pharmacodynamics of the injected immunotherapy and its efficacy through correlation of immune responses, pathologic responses, and imaging tumor response. The aim of this article is to share the technical insights of HIT-IT, with particular consideration for patient selection, lesion assessment, image guidance, and technical injection options. In addition, the organization of a standard patient workflow is discussed, so as to optimize HIT-IT outcome and the patient experience.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85102888714&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-19-4073
DO - 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-19-4073
M3 - Review article
C2 - 33419781
AN - SCOPUS:85102888714
SN - 1078-0432
VL - 27
SP - 2698
EP - 2705
JO - Clinical Cancer Research
JF - Clinical Cancer Research
IS - 10
ER -