In vivo imaging of T cell delivery to tumors after adoptive transfer therapy

MJ Pittet, J Grimm, CR Berger… - Proceedings of the …, 2007 - National Acad Sciences
MJ Pittet, J Grimm, CR Berger, T Tamura, G Wojtkiewicz, M Nahrendorf, P Romero…
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007National Acad Sciences
Adoptive transfer therapy of in vitro-expanded tumor-specific cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTLs)
can mediate objective cancer regression in patients. Yet, technical limitations hamper
precise monitoring of posttherapy T cell responses. Here we show in a mouse model that
fused single photon emission computed tomography and x-ray computed tomography
allows quantitative whole-body imaging of 111In-oxine-labeled CTLs at tumor sites.
Assessment of CTL localization is rapid, noninvasive, three-dimensional, and can be …
Adoptive transfer therapy of in vitro-expanded tumor-specific cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTLs) can mediate objective cancer regression in patients. Yet, technical limitations hamper precise monitoring of posttherapy T cell responses. Here we show in a mouse model that fused single photon emission computed tomography and x-ray computed tomography allows quantitative whole-body imaging of 111In-oxine-labeled CTLs at tumor sites. Assessment of CTL localization is rapid, noninvasive, three-dimensional, and can be repeated for longitudinal analyses. We compared the effects of lymphodepletion before adoptive transfer on CTL recruitment and report that combined treatment increased intratumoral delivery of CTLs and improved antitumor efficacy. Because 111In-oxine is a Food and Drug Administration-approved clinical agent, and human SPECT-CT systems are available, this approach should be clinically translatable, insofar as it may assess the efficacy of immunization procedures in individual patients and lead to development of more effective therapies.
National Acad Sciences