Colorectal cancer (CRC) ranks as the third common and the fourth lethal cancer type worldwide. Immune checkpoint blockade therapy demonstrates great efficacy in a subset of metastatic CRC patients, but precise activation of the antitumor immune response at the tumor site is still challenging. Here a versatile prodrug nanoparticle for second near-infrared (NIR-II) fluorescence imaging-guided combinatory immunotherapy of CRC is reported. The prodrug nanoparticles are constructed with a polymeric oxaliplatin prodrug (PBOXA) and a donor-spacer-acceptor-spacer-donor type small molecular fluorophore TQTCD. The later displays large Stokes shift (>300 nm), fluorescence emission over 1000 nm, and excellent photothermal conversion performance for NIR-II fluorescence imaging-guided photothermal therapy (PTT). The prodrug nanoparticles show seven times higher intratumoral OXA accumulation than free oxaliplatin. TQTCD-based PTT and PBOXA-induced chemotherapy trigger immunogenic cell death of the tumor cells and elicit antitumor immune response in a spatiotemporally controllable manner. Further combination of the prodrug nanoparticle-based PTT/chemotherapy with programmed death ligand 1 blockade significantly promotes intratumoral infiltration of the cytotoxic T lymphocytes and eradicates the CRC tumors. The NIR-II fluorescence imaging-guided immunotherapy may provide a promising approach for CRC treatment.
Keywords: colorectal cancer; combinatory immunotherapy; immunogenic cell death; prodrug nanoparticles; second near-infrared fluorescence imaging.
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