| Literature DB >> 28271366 |
Abstract
Immunotherapies include various approaches, ranging from stimulating effector mechanisms to counteracting inhibitory and suppressive mechanisms, and creating a forum for discussing the most effective means of advancing these therapies through imaging is the focus of the newly formed Imaging in Cellular and Immune Therapies (ICIT) interest group within the World Molecular Imaging Society. Efforts are being made in the identification and validation of predictive biomarkers for a number of immunotherapies. Without predictive biomarkers, a considerable number of patients may receive treatments that have no chance of offering a benefit. This will reflect poorly on the field of immunotherapy and will yield false hopes in patients while at the same time contributing to significant cost to the healthcare system. This review summarizes the main strategies in cancer immune and cell-based therapies and discusses recent advances in imaging strategies aimed to improve cancer immunotherapy outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Cell-based therapy; Imaging; Immunotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28271366 PMCID: PMC5406436 DOI: 10.1007/s11307-017-1069-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Imaging Biol ISSN: 1536-1632 Impact factor: 3.488
Fig. 1Anti-CD8 immuno-PET in subcutaneous colorectal immunotherapy model. CT26 murine colon cancer-grafted mice were treated with CD137-agonistic Abs: CD137-treated, CD137-treated/CD8-blocked mice, and control mice (no anti-CD137 therapy) were injected with 89Zr-malDFO-169 cDb and immuno-PET images were acquired at 22 h postinjection. Note the presence of increased CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes within the tumor in CD137-treated animal (white arrow, adapted from [56]).
Immuno-imaging targets and agents
| Immune cell compartment/function | Molecular target | Imaging agent | Modality | Stage of development |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tumor/Tumor immunosuppressive microenvironment | PD-L1 | [89Zr]/[64Cu]Anti-PD-L1-Ab/peptide [ | PET | Clinical |
| Immune cell proliferation | Deoxycytidine kinase | L-[18F]FAC, −CFA [ | PET | Clinical |
| T lymphocyte activation | Deoxyguanosine kinase | [18F]AraG [ | PET | Clinical |
| Cytotoxic T lymphocytes | CD8 | [89Zr]/[64Cu]Anti-CD8-Ab [ | PET | Clinical |
| Macrophages | N/A | Ferumoxytol [ | MRI | Clinical |
| T lymphocyte inhibition | CTLA-4 | [64Cu]Anti-CTLA-4-Ab [ | PET | Pre-clinical |
| T lymphocyte inhibition | PD-1 | [64Cu]Anti-PD-1-Ab [ | PET | Pre-clinical |
| Macrophages (TAMs) | CD47 | [89Zr]Anti-CD47-Ab [ | PET | Pre-clinical |
| Neutrophils | CD11b/MHC-II | [18F]/[64Cu]Anti-CD11b/MHC-II-Ab [ | PET | Pre-clinical |
| Transgeneic T cells | Transgeneic TCR | [89Zr]/[64Cu]Anti–TCR-Ab [ | PET | Pre-clinical |
| T lymphocyte trafficking | CXCR4 | [64Cu]AMD3100 [ | PET | Pre-clinical |
| Macrophages (TAMs) | B7-H3 | MicrobubblesAnti-B7-H3 [ | Ultrasound | Pre-clinical |
N/A not available
Fig. 2Tumor-directed CAR-T cell PET imaging with [18F]FHBG. [18F]FHBG PET imaging was performed in a patient with a recurrent right frontoparietal glioblastoma a before and b 1 week after tumor-specific CAR-T cell infusions. Allogeneic CAR-T cells and IL-2 were injected intratumorally (red arrows). Tumor recurrence was monitored by T1-weighted (T1W) MRI (top panels). [18F]FHBG PET images were fused with MR images (bottom panels), and three-dimensional (3D) volumes of interest were drawn using a 50 % [18F]FHBG SUVmaxthreshold, outlined in yellow (adapted from [80]).