1. Academic Validation
  2. Blockade of IL-10 Signaling Ensures Mifamurtide Efficacy in Metastatic Osteosarcoma

Blockade of IL-10 Signaling Ensures Mifamurtide Efficacy in Metastatic Osteosarcoma

  • Cancers (Basel). 2023 Sep 27;15(19):4744. doi: 10.3390/cancers15194744.
Nicoletta Nastasi 1 2 Amada Pasha 1 2 Gennaro Bruno 1 2 Angela Subbiani 1 2 Laura Pietrovito 2 Angela Leo 2 Lucia Scala 3 Lorena de Simone 3 Gabriella Casazza 4 Federica Lunardi 4 Maria Letizia Taddei 2 Angela Tamburini 1 Annalisa Tondo 1 Claudio Favre 1 Maura Calvani 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Pediatric Hematology–Oncology, Meyer Children's Hospital IRCCS, 50139 Florence, Italy.
  • 2 Department of Experimental and Clinical Biomedical Sciences "Mario Serio", University of Florence, 50139 Florence, Italy.
  • 3 Pharmaceutical Unit, A. Meyer Children's Hospital, Scientific Institute for Research, Hospitalisation and Health Care, 50139 Florence, Italy.
  • 4 Pediatric Oncology-Hematology Unit, Pisa University Hospital, 56126 Pisa, Italy.
Abstract

Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common primary malignancy of the bone, highly aggressive and metastasizing, and it mainly affects children and adolescents. The current standard of care for OS is a combination of surgery and chemotherapy. However, these treatment options are not always successful, especially in cases of metastatic or recurrent osteosarcomas. For this reason, research into new therapeutic strategies is currently underway, and immunotherapies have received considerable attention. Mifamurtide stands out among the most studied immunostimulant drugs; nevertheless, there are very conflicting opinions on its therapeutic efficacy. Here, we aimed to investigate mifamurtide efficacy through in vitro and in vivo experiments. Our results led us to identify a new possible target useful to improve mifamurtide effectiveness on metastatic OS: the cytokine interleukin-10 (IL-10). We provide experimental evidence that the synergic use of an anti-IL-10 antibody in combination with mifamurtide causes a significantly increased mortality rate in highest-grade OS cells and lower metastasis in an in vivo model compared with mifamurtide alone. Overall, our data suggest that mifamurtide in combination with an anti-IL-10 antibody could be proposed as a new treatment protocol to be studied to improve the outcomes of OS patients.

Keywords

cytokines; immunotherapy; macrophages; mifamurtide; osteosarcoma.

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