Chemo-immunotherapy
shows promising antitumor therapeutic outcomes
for many primary cancers. Research in this area has been focusing
on developing an ideal formula that enables the potent efficacy of
chemo-immunotherapy in combating various cancers with reduced systemic
toxicity. Herein, we present novel hierarchical hydrogel microparticles
(MDDP) delivering oxaliplatin and NLG919 nanoprodrugs for
local chemo-immunotherapy with desired features. The oxaliplatin prodrug
and NLG919 were efficiently loaded in the dual-drug polymeric nanoparticles
(DDP NPs), which were further encapsulated into a MDDP by
using microfluidic technology. When delivered to the tumor site, the
DDP NPs will be sustainedly released from the MDDP and
retained locally to reduce systemic toxicity. After being endocytosed
by cancer cells, the cytotoxic oxaliplatin and NLG919 could be successfully
triggered to release from DDP NPs in a chain-shattering manner, leading
to the immunogenic cell death (ICD) of tumor cells and the suppression
of intratumoral immunosuppressive Tregs, respectively. With the assistance
of an immune modulator, the chemotherapeutics-induced ICD could trigger
robust systemic antitumor immune responses, presenting superior synergistic
antitumor efficacies. Thus, the hierarchical microparticles could
substantially inhibit the growth of mouse subcutaneous colorectal
tumors, breast tumors, and colorectal tumors with large initial sizes
via synergized chemo-immunotherapy, showing great potential in the
practical clinical application of oncotherapy