Literature DB >> 18779745

Minimally cultured tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes display optimal characteristics for adoptive cell therapy.

Khoi Q Tran1, Juhua Zhou, Katherine H Durflinger, Michelle M Langhan, Thomas E Shelton, John R Wunderlich, Paul F Robbins, Steven A Rosenberg, Mark E Dudley.   

Abstract

Adoptive cell therapy (ACT) with tumor-reactive lymphocytes in patients with refractory melanoma can result in tumor regression and prolonged survival. Generating tumor-reactive lymphocyte cultures is technically difficult and resource intensive; these limitations have restricted the widespread application of ACT. Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) from melanoma contain tumor antigen-reactive cells. The "standard" method for producing TIL cultures for clinical administration requires extended in vitro expansion in interleukin-2, then identification of tumor-reactive cells by immunologic assays. We show here that limitations in reagents and methods during screening underrepresent the actual reactivity of TIL cultures. Furthermore, the extended culture times necessitated by the screening assays resulted in telomere shortening and reduced expression of CD27 and CD28 in the TIL cultures, properties that our prior studies showed are correlated with in vivo persistence and clinical response. We have thus developed an alternative "young" TIL method that demonstrated superior in vitro attributes compared with standard TIL. This approach uses the entire resected tumor to rapidly expand TIL for administration without in vitro testing for tumor recognition. Our observations suggest that younger TIL can have an undetermined but high level of antigen reactivity, and other advantageous attributes such as long telomeres and high levels of CD27 and CD28. We suggest that minimally cultured, unselected lymphocytes represent an alternative strategy for generating TIL cultures suitable for use in ACT that, if effective in vivo, may facilitate the widespread application of this approach to a broader population of patients with melanoma.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18779745      PMCID: PMC2614999          DOI: 10.1097/CJI.0b013e31818403d5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunother        ISSN: 1524-9557            Impact factor:   4.456


  30 in total

1.  Adoptive T cell therapy using antigen-specific CD8+ T cell clones for the treatment of patients with metastatic melanoma: in vivo persistence, migration, and antitumor effect of transferred T cells.

Authors:  C Yee; J A Thompson; D Byrd; S R Riddell; P Roche; E Celis; P D Greenberg
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2002-11-11       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Chemotherapy for metastatic melanoma: time for a change?

Authors:  Helen J Gogas; John M Kirkwood; Vernon K Sondak
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2007-02-01       Impact factor: 6.860

3.  Adoptive cell therapy for patients with metastatic melanoma: evaluation of intensive myeloablative chemoradiation preparative regimens.

Authors:  Mark E Dudley; James C Yang; Richard Sherry; Marybeth S Hughes; Richard Royal; Udai Kammula; Paul F Robbins; JianPing Huang; Deborah E Citrin; Susan F Leitman; John Wunderlich; Nicholas P Restifo; Armen Thomasian; Stephanie G Downey; Franz O Smith; Jacob Klapper; Kathleen Morton; Carolyn Laurencot; Donald E White; Steven A Rosenberg
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2008-09-22       Impact factor: 44.544

4.  High-dose recombinant interleukin-2 therapy in patients with metastatic melanoma: long-term survival update.

Authors:  M B Atkins; L Kunkel; M Sznol; S A Rosenberg
Journal:  Cancer J Sci Am       Date:  2000-02

5.  Cancer/testis antigen expression and specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses in non small cell lung cancer.

Authors:  Célia Groeper; Franco Gambazzi; Paul Zajac; Lukas Bubendorf; Michel Adamina; Rachel Rosenthal; Hans-Reinhard Zerkowski; Michael Heberer; Giulio C Spagnoli
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2007-01-15       Impact factor: 7.396

6.  A phase I study of nonmyeloablative chemotherapy and adoptive transfer of autologous tumor antigen-specific T lymphocytes in patients with metastatic melanoma.

Authors:  Mark E Dudley; John R Wunderlich; James C Yang; Patrick Hwu; Douglas J Schwartzentruber; Suzanne L Topalian; Richard M Sherry; Francesco M Marincola; Susan F Leitman; Claudia A Seipp; Linda Rogers-Freezer; Kathleen E Morton; Azam Nahvi; Sharon A Mavroukakis; Donald E White; Steven A Rosenberg
Journal:  J Immunother       Date:  2002 May-Jun       Impact factor: 4.456

7.  Cancer statistics, 2007.

Authors:  Ahmedin Jemal; Rebecca Siegel; Elizabeth Ward; Taylor Murray; Jiaquan Xu; Michael J Thun
Journal:  CA Cancer J Clin       Date:  2007 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 508.702

8.  Phase I study of adoptive T-cell therapy using antigen-specific CD8+ T cells for the treatment of patients with metastatic melanoma.

Authors:  Andreas Mackensen; Norbert Meidenbauer; Sandra Vogl; Monika Laumer; Jana Berger; Reinhard Andreesen
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2006-11-01       Impact factor: 44.544

9.  Cancer regression and autoimmunity in patients after clonal repopulation with antitumor lymphocytes.

Authors:  Mark E Dudley; John R Wunderlich; Paul F Robbins; James C Yang; Patrick Hwu; Douglas J Schwartzentruber; Suzanne L Topalian; Richard Sherry; Nicholas P Restifo; Amy M Hubicki; Michael R Robinson; Mark Raffeld; Paul Duray; Claudia A Seipp; Linda Rogers-Freezer; Kathleen E Morton; Sharon A Mavroukakis; Donald E White; Steven A Rosenberg
Journal:  Science       Date:  2002-09-19       Impact factor: 47.728

10.  Allogeneic cytotoxic T-cell therapy for EBV-positive posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disease: results of a phase 2 multicenter clinical trial.

Authors:  Tanzina Haque; Gwen M Wilkie; Marie M Jones; Craig D Higgins; Gillian Urquhart; Phoebe Wingate; David Burns; Karen McAulay; Marc Turner; Christopher Bellamy; Peter L Amlot; Deirdre Kelly; Alastair MacGilchrist; Maher K Gandhi; Anthony J Swerdlow; Dorothy H Crawford
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2007-04-27       Impact factor: 22.113

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  98 in total

Review 1.  Adoptive T-cell therapy using autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes for metastatic melanoma: current status and future outlook.

Authors:  Richard Wu; Marie-Andrée Forget; Jessica Chacon; Chantale Bernatchez; Cara Haymaker; Jie Qing Chen; Patrick Hwu; Laszlo G Radvanyi
Journal:  Cancer J       Date:  2012 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 3.360

Review 2.  Manufacture of tumor- and virus-specific T lymphocytes for adoptive cell therapies.

Authors:  X Wang; I Rivière
Journal:  Cancer Gene Ther       Date:  2015-02-27       Impact factor: 5.987

3.  Tumor regression in patients with metastatic synovial cell sarcoma and melanoma using genetically engineered lymphocytes reactive with NY-ESO-1.

Authors:  Paul F Robbins; Richard A Morgan; Steven A Feldman; James C Yang; Richard M Sherry; Mark E Dudley; John R Wunderlich; Azam V Nahvi; Lee J Helman; Crystal L Mackall; Udai S Kammula; Marybeth S Hughes; Nicholas P Restifo; Mark Raffeld; Chyi-Chia Richard Lee; Catherine L Levy; Yong F Li; Mona El-Gamil; Susan L Schwarz; Carolyn Laurencot; Steven A Rosenberg
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2011-01-31       Impact factor: 44.544

4.  Durable complete responses in heavily pretreated patients with metastatic melanoma using T-cell transfer immunotherapy.

Authors:  Steven A Rosenberg; James C Yang; Richard M Sherry; Udai S Kammula; Marybeth S Hughes; Giao Q Phan; Deborah E Citrin; Nicholas P Restifo; Paul F Robbins; John R Wunderlich; Kathleen E Morton; Carolyn M Laurencot; Seth M Steinberg; Donald E White; Mark E Dudley
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2011-04-15       Impact factor: 12.531

5.  N-acetyl cysteine protects anti-melanoma cytotoxic T cells from exhaustion induced by rapid expansion via the downmodulation of Foxo1 in an Akt-dependent manner.

Authors:  Matthew J Scheffel; Gina Scurti; Megan M Wyatt; Elizabeth Garrett-Mayer; Chrystal M Paulos; Michael I Nishimura; Christina Voelkel-Johnson
Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother       Date:  2018-02-02       Impact factor: 6.968

6.  Phenotypic and functional attributes of lentivirus-modified CD19-specific human CD8+ central memory T cells manufactured at clinical scale.

Authors:  Xiuli Wang; Araceli Naranjo; Christine E Brown; Cherrilyn Bautista; Chinglam W Wong; Wen-Chung Chang; Brenda Aguilar; Julie R Ostberg; Stanley R Riddell; Stephen J Forman; Michael C Jensen
Journal:  J Immunother       Date:  2012 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 4.456

Review 7.  Sorting through subsets: which T-cell populations mediate highly effective adoptive immunotherapy?

Authors:  Christopher A Klebanoff; Luca Gattinoni; Nicholas P Restifo
Journal:  J Immunother       Date:  2012 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 4.456

8.  CD137 accurately identifies and enriches for naturally occurring tumor-reactive T cells in tumor.

Authors:  Qunrui Ye; De-Gang Song; Mathilde Poussin; Tori Yamamoto; Andrew Best; Chunsheng Li; George Coukos; Daniel J Powell
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2013-09-17       Impact factor: 12.531

Review 9.  Hyperthermia as an immunotherapy strategy for cancer.

Authors:  Joseph J Skitzki; Elizabeth A Repasky; Sharon S Evans
Journal:  Curr Opin Investig Drugs       Date:  2009-06

10.  microRNA expression patterns in tumor infiltrating lymphocytes are strongly associated with response to adoptive cell transfer therapy.

Authors:  Michal J Besser; Gal Markel; Gilli Galore-Haskel; Eyal Greenberg; Inbal Yahav; Ettai Markovits; Rona Ortenberg; Ronnie Shapira-Fromer; Orit Itzhaki; Jacob Schachter
Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother       Date:  2020-11-17       Impact factor: 6.968

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