| Literature DB >> 27274983 |
Michael D Keller1, Catherine M Bollard1.
Abstract
Anti-pathogen adoptive T-cell immunotherapy has been proven to be highly effective in preventing or controlling viral infections following hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Recent advances in manufacturing protocols allow an increased number of targeted pathogens, eliminate the need for viral transduction, broaden the potential donor pool to include pathogen-naïve sources, and reduce the time requirement for production. Early studies suggest that anti-fungal immunotherapy may also have clinical benefit. Future advances include further broadening of the pathogens that can be targeted and development of T-cells with resistance to pharmacologic immunosuppression.Entities:
Keywords: T-cell; fungus; immunotherapy; stem cell transplantation; virus
Year: 2014 PMID: 27274983 PMCID: PMC4889027 DOI: 10.2147/ITT.S40082
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunotargets Ther ISSN: 2253-1556
Figure 1Current Good Manufacturing Practice-compliant approaches for generation of antipathogen CTL products.
Notes: Cell selection utilizes either multimers displaying a pathogen-derived peptide in the setting of a type I human leukocyte antigen molecule, or column selection utilizing ex vivo stimulation of T-cells with antigens followed by selection of interferon-gamma or CD154-expressing T-cells via antibody-coated immunomagnetic beads. Ex vivo cell culture utilizes stimulation of T-cells by antigen-displaying antigen-presenting cells, which can be produced via antigenic peptide pools, viral transduction, or nucleofection. A rapid protocol can produce cytotoxic T-lymphocytes in 10–12 days from virus-seropositive donors after a single stimulation, whereas production of cytotoxic T-lymphocytes derived from cord blood requires three stimulations over a minimum of 28 days.
Abbreviations: CTL, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte; IFN, interferon.
Previous clinical trials of pathogen-specific T-cell therapy
| Strategy | Study | Pathogen specificity | Donor | Methodology | Patient accrual | Centers (n) | Advantages/disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell selection | Cobbold et al | CMV | HSCT donor or third-party | Tetramer selection | 9 | 1 | |
| Feuchtinger et al | CMV | HSCT donor or third-party | Interferon-gamma column selection | 18 | 1 | Uses existing GMP compliant technology | |
| Peggs et al | CMV | HSCT donor | Interferon-gamma column selection | 18 | 1 | ||
| Schmitt et al | CMV | HSCT donor | Reversible Streptamer selection | 2 | 1 | ||
| Feuchtinger et al | Adv | HSCT donor | Interferon-gamma column selection | 9 | 1 | ||
| Uhlin et al | EBV | Related haploidentical donor | Multimer selection | 1 | 1 | Requires presence of pathogen-specific memory T-cells | |
| Moosman et al | EBV | HSCT donor | Interferon-gamma column selection | 6 | 1 | ||
| Qasim et al | Adv | Third party | Interferon-gamma column selection | 1 | 1 | ||
| Uhlin et al | CMV/EBV/Adv | HSCT donor or third-party | Pentamer selection | 8 | 1 | ||
|
| |||||||
| Cell culture | Perruccio et al | CMV or Aspergillus | HSCT donor | Stimulation of PBMC with CMV antigen or inactivated conidia | 10 | 1 | |
| Leen et al | CMV/EBV/Adv | HSCT donor | Ad5f35pp65 transduced LCL | 26 | 3 | Allows CTL development from pathogen-naïve donors | |
| Micklethwaite et al | CMV/Adv | HSCT donor | Ad5f35pp65 transduced DC | 12 | 1 | ||
| Leen et al | EBV/Adv | HSCT donor | Ad5f35 null transduced LCL | 13 | 3 | ||
| Barker et al | EBV | Third-party donor | EBV-LCL stimulation | 2 | 1 | ||
| Rooney et al 2010 | EBV | HSCT donor | Irradiated EBV-LCL | 114 | 3 | ||
| Balduzzi et al | JCV | HSCT donor | Pepmix-pulsed PBMC | 1 | 1 | ||
| Leen et al | CMV/EBV/Adv | Third-party donor | Ad5f35pp65 transduced LCL | 47 | 8 | Regulatory requirements for GMP culturing | |
| Gerdemann et al 2013 | CMV/EBV/Adv | HSCT donor | Nucleofection of DCs | 12 | 2 | ||
| Blythe et al 2013 | CMV or CMV/Adv | HSCT donor | NLV-peptide pulsing or Ad5f35pp65 transduction of DCs | 50 | 2 | ||
Abbreviations: Adv, adenovirus; CMV, cytomegalovirus; CTL, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte; DC, dendritic cells; EBV, Epstein Barr virus; GMP, Good Manufacturing Practice; LCL, lymphoblastoid cell lines; HSCT, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; PBMCs, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; JCV, John Cunningham virus.
Preclinical studies of novel antipathogen T-cell therapies
| Study | Pathogen specificity | Donor | Methodology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beck et al | Aspergillus | Healthy donors | Interferon-gamma selection after stimluation of PBMCs with Aspergillus extracts |
| Khanna et al | Aspergillus, Candida, Rhinopus | Healthy donors | CD154 selection after stimulation of PBMCs with fungal extracts |
| Gerdemann et al | CMV/EBV/Adv/HHV6/RSV/BK/influenza | Healthy donors | Nucleofection or Pepmix stimulation of DCs |
| Ramos et al | HPV13 | Cervical or nasopharyngeal cancer patients | Pepmix stimulation of DCs |
| Tramsen et al | Aspergillus, Candida, Rhinopus | Healthy donors | Interferon-gamma selection after stimluation of PBMCs with fungal extracts |
Abbreviations: Adv, adenovirus; CMV, cytomegalovirus; DCs, dendritic cells; EBV, Epstein Barr virus; PBMCs, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; HHV, human herpesvirus 6; HPV, human papillomavirus; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus.