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In VivoMRI Tracking of Tumor Vaccination and Antigen Presentation by Dendritic Cells

Journal

MOLECULAR IMAGING AND BIOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages 198-207

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11307-021-01647-4

Keywords

Dendritic cell; Antigen presentation; Cancer vaccination; Magnetic resonance imaging; Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles; Fluorine emulsions; Cell tracking

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [P41 EB024495, R01 DK106972, R01 EB023647, R01 EB030376, R01 CA257557, UH2 EB028904, S10 OD026740]
  2. Maryland Stem Cell Research Foundation [MSCRFD-5416]
  3. Philips Medical Systems Inc.
  4. NovaDip Biosciences

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The efficacy of cancer vaccines using tumor antigen-primed dendritic cells (DCs) is influenced by the complexity of the immune response and various factors. Proton (H-1) and fluorine (F-19) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can be utilized to track and accurately inject therapeutic DCs, predicting vaccine effectiveness in advance.
Cancer vaccination using tumor antigen-primed dendritic cells (DCs) was introduced in the clinic some 25 years ago, but the overall outcome has not lived up to initial expectations. There are to the complexity of the immune response, there are many factors that determine the efficacy of DC therapy. These include accurate administration of DCs in the target tissue site without unwanted cell dispersion/backflow, sufficient numbers of tumor antigen-primed DCs homing to lymph nodes (LNs), and proper timing of immunoadjuvant administration. To address these uncertainties, proton (H-1) and fluorine (F-19) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) tracking of ex vivo pre-labeled DCs can now be used to non-invasively determine the accuracy of therapeutic DC injection, initial DC dispersion, systemic DC distribution, and DC migration to and within LNs. Magnetovaccination is an alternative approach that tracks in vivo labeled DCs that simultaneously capture tumor antigen and MR contrast agent in situ, enabling an accurate quantification of antigen presentation to T cells in LNs. The ultimate clinical premise of MRI DC tracking would be to use changes in LN MRI signal as an early imaging biomarker to predict the efficacy of tumor vaccination and anti-tumor response long before treatment outcome becomes apparent, which may aid clinicians with interim treatment management.

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