Intratumoral administration of mRNA COVID-19 vaccine delays melanoma growth in mice.

Intratumoral administration of mRNA COVID-19 vaccine delays melanoma growth in mice.

Publication date: Feb 13, 2025

Immunotherapies are effective for cancer treatment but are limited in ‘cold’ tumor microenvironments due to a lack of infiltrating CD8 T cells, key players in the anti-cancer immune response. The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic sparked the widespread use of mRNA-formulated vaccines and is well documented that vaccination induces a Th1-skewed immune response. Here, we evaluated the effects of an intratumoral injection of the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine in subcutaneous melanoma tumor mouse models. Tumor growth and survival studies following a single intratumoral injection of the COVID-19 vaccine showed significant tumor suppression and prolonged survival in established B16F10 subcutaneous tumor-bearing mice. mRNA vaccine treatment resulted in a significant increase in CD8 T cell infiltration into the tumor microenvironment, as observed using intravital imaging and flow cytometry. Further tumor growth suppression was achieved using additional mRNA vaccine treatments. Combination administration of mRNA vaccine with immune checkpoint therapies demonstrated enhanced effects, further delaying tumor growth and improving the survival time of tumor-bearing mice. This study demonstrates that mRNA vaccines may be used as adjuvants for immunotherapies.

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Concepts Keywords
B16f10 Animals
Cancer CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes
Improving Cell Line, Tumor
Mice COVID-19
Vaccination COVID-19 vaccine
COVID-19 Vaccines
COVID-19 Vaccines
Female
Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors
Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors
Immunotherapy
Immunotherapy
Injections, Intralesional
Melanoma
Melanoma, Experimental
Mice
mRNA vaccine
mRNA Vaccines
mRNA Vaccines
SARS-CoV-2
T cell infiltration
Tumor Microenvironment

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH melanoma
pathway KEGG Melanoma
disease MESH cancer
disease IDO immune response
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease IDO cell
disease MESH cytokine storm
disease MESH inflammation
disease IDO host
disease IDO pathogen
disease MESH tetanus
disease MESH pertussis
pathway KEGG Pertussis
disease MESH diphtheria
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease IDO production
drug DRUGBANK Proline
drug DRUGBANK L-Tryptophan
pathway REACTOME Immune System
disease MESH seroconversion
disease IDO quality
disease MESH bladder tumor
disease MESH influenza
drug DRUGBANK Spinosad
disease IDO process
disease MESH recurrence
drug DRUGBANK Tromethamine
drug DRUGBANK Phosphate ion
drug DRUGBANK Pentobarbital
drug DRUGBANK Carbon dioxide
disease MESH dissociation
disease IDO blood
drug DRUGBANK Aspartame
drug DRUGBANK Chromium
disease MESH Lymph Node metastases
disease MESH B16 melanoma
drug DRUGBANK Nivolumab
drug DRUGBANK Ipilimumab
disease MESH metastases
drug DRUGBANK Esomeprazole
drug DRUGBANK Bismuth subgallate
drug DRUGBANK Sulpiride
pathway KEGG Bladder cancer
disease MESH infectious diseases
drug DRUGBANK Uridine
disease MESH lung inflammation
drug DRUGBANK Pembrolizumab
disease IDO nucleic acid
disease IDO facility
drug DRUGBANK Copper
pathway REACTOME Reproduction

Original Article

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