Ablative treatments such as photothermal therapy (PTT) are attractive anticancer strategies because they debulk accessible
tumor sites while simultaneously priming antitumor immune responses. However, the immune response following thermal
ablation is often insufficient to treat metastatic disease. Here we demonstrate that PTT induces the expression of
proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines and promotes the maturation of dendritic cells within tumor-draining lymph
nodes, thereby priming antitumor T cell responses. Unexpectedly, however, these immunomodulatory effects were not
beneficial to overall antitumor immunity. We found that PTT promoted the infiltration of secondary tumor sites by
CD11b+Ly-6G/C+ myeloid-derived suppressor cells, consequently failing to slow the growth of poorly immunogenic B16-F10
tumors and enhancing the growth of distant lung metastases. To exploit the beneficial effects of PTT activity against local
tumors and on antitumor immunity whilst avoiding the adverse consequences, we adoptively transferred gp100-specific
pmel T cells following PTT. The combination of local control by PTT and systemic antitumor immune reactivity provided by
adoptively transferred T cells prevented primary tumor recurrence post-ablation, inhibited tumor growth at distant sites,
and abrogated the outgrowth of lung metastases. Hence, the combination of PTT and systemic immunotherapy prevented
the adverse effects of PTT on metastatic tumor growth and optimized overall tumor control