4.7 Article

Monitoring the efficacy of adoptively transferred prostate cancer-targeted human T lymphocytes with PET and bioluminescence imaging

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
Volume 49, Issue 7, Pages 1162-1170

Publisher

SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC
DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.107.047324

Keywords

PET; molecular imaging; adoptive immunotherapy; HSV1tk; F-18-FEAU

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [P50 CA086438-080006, P01 CA059350, P30 CA008748, P50 CA86438-01, R01 CA102352, P01 CA59350, R01 CA102352-03, P50 CA086438] Funding Source: Medline

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Noninvasive imaging technologies have the potential to enhance the monitoring and improvement of adoptive therapy with tumor-targeted T lymphocytes. We established an imaging methodology for the assessment of spatial and temporal distributions of adoptively transferred genetically modified human T cells in vivo for treatment monitoring and prediction of tumor response in a systemic prostate cancer model. Methods: RM1 murine prostate carcinoma tumors transduced with human prostate-specific membrane antigen (hPSMA) and a Renilla luciferase reporter gene were established in SCID/beige mice. Human T lymphocytes were transduced with chimeric antigen receptors (CAR) specific for either hPSMA or human carcinoembryonic antigen (hCEA) and with a fusion reporter gene for herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase (HSV1tk) and green fluorescent protein, with or without click beetle red luciferase. The localization of adoptively transferred T cells in tumor-bearing mice was monitored with 2'-F-18-fluoro-2'-deoxy-1-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl-5-ethyluracil (F-18-FEAU) small-animal PET and bioluminescence imaging (BLI). Results: Cotransduction of CAR-expressing T cells with the reporter gene did not affect CAR-mediated cytotoxicity. BLI of Renilla and click beetle red luciferase expression enabled concurrent imaging of adoptively transferred T cells and systemic tumors in the same animal. hPSMA-specific T lymphocytes persisted longer than control hCEA-targeted T cells in lung hPSMA-positive tumors, as indicated by both PET and BLI. Precise quantification of T-cell distributions at tumor sites by PET revealed that delayed tumor progression was positively correlated with the levels of F-18-FEAU accumulation in tumor foci in treated animals. Conclusion: Quantitative noninvasive monitoring of genetically engineered human T lymphocytes by PET provides spatial and temporal information on T-cell trafficking and persistence. PET may be useful for predicting tumor response and for guiding adoptive T-cell therapy.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available