| Literature DB >> 30030697 |
Gilbert O Fruhwirth1, Manfred Kneilling2,3, I Jolanda M de Vries4, Bettina Weigelin5,6, Mangala Srinivas4, Erik H J G Aarntzen7.
Abstract
This review aims to emphasize the potential of in vivo imaging to optimize current and upcoming anti-cancer immunotherapies: spanning from preclinical to clinical applications. Immunotherapies are an emerging class of treatments for a variety of diseases. The agents include molecular and cellular therapeutics, which aim to treat the disease through re-education of the host immune system, often via complex mechanisms of action. In vivo imaging has the potential to contribute in several different ways: (1) as a drug development tool to improve our understanding of their complex mechanisms of action, (2) as a tool to predict efficacy, for example, to stratify patients into probable responders and likely non-responders, and (3) as a non-invasive treatment response biomarker to guide efficient immunotherapy use and to recognize early signs of potential loss of efficacy or resistance in patients. Areas where in vivo imaging is already successfully implemented in onco-immunology research will be discussed and domains where its use offers great potential will be highlighted. The focus of this article is on anti-cancer immunotherapy as it currently is the most advanced immunotherapy area. However, the described concepts can also be paralleled in other immune-mediated disorders and for conditions requiring immunotherapeutic intervention. Importantly, we introduce a new study group within the European Society of Molecular Imaging with the goal to facilitate and enhance immunotherapy development through the use of in vivo imaging.Entities:
Keywords: Imaging biomarker; Immunotherapy; In vivo imaging; Oncology; Translation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30030697 PMCID: PMC6153672 DOI: 10.1007/s11307-018-1254-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Imaging Biol ISSN: 1536-1632 Impact factor: 3.488
Fig. 1a Schematic overview of the different stages of onco-immunology research at which molecular imaging can potentially play a role. b Intravital multiphoton microscopy is applied to monitor immunotherapy response, e.g., it allows to monitor adoptively transferred CD8+ T cell (CTL)(yellow) tumor (red) infiltration with high spatial resolution and to quantify interactions with other immune cells (macrophages, blue) or stromal elements (blood vessels, green) of the tumor microenvironment. c Preclinical PET imaging using 89Zr-mal-DFO-169 cys-diabodies to track endogenous CTLs in a mouse CT26 tumor model during PD-L1 therapy, demonstrating that response to PD-L1 inhibition coincides with infiltration of CTLs deep into the tumor (arrow, right panel), in contrast to non-responding mice in which CTL remain at the rim of tumors (arrow, left panel) [81]. d Coronal images of a [18F]fluoroestradiol PET/CT in a metastatic breast cancer patient, prior to start hormonal treatment, demonstrating estrogen-receptor expression in two mediastinal lymph node metastases (arrows) (of note, physiological high tracer uptake in the liver and excretion via the kidneys and urinary bladder)