Background
Adoptive transfer of T cells is a burgeoning cancer therapeutic approach. However, the fate of the cells, once transferred, is most often unknown. We describe the first clinical experience with a non-invasive biomarker to assay the apoptotic cell fraction (ACF) after cell therapy infusion, tested in the setting of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). A patient with HNSCC received autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) labeled with a perfluorocarbon (PFC) nanoemulsion cell tracer. Nanoemulsion, released from apoptotic cells, clears through the reticuloendothelial system, particularly the Kupffer cells of the liver, and fluorine-19 (19F) magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) of the liver was used to non-invasively infer the ACF.
Methods
Autologous TILs were isolated from a patient in their late 50s with relapsed, refractory human papillomavirus-mediated squamous cell carcinoma of the right tonsil, metastatic to the lung. A lung metastasis was resected for T cell harvest and expansion using a rapid expansion protocol. The expanded TILs were intracellularly labeled with PFC nanoemulsion tracer by coincubation in the final 24 hours of culture, followed by a wash step. At 22 days after intravenous infusion of TILs, quantitative single-voxel liver 19F MRS was performed in vivo using a 3T MRI system. From these data, we model the apparent ACF of the initial cell inoculant.
Results
We show that it is feasible to PFC-label ~70x1010 TILs (F-TILs) in a single batch in a clinical cell processing facility, while maintaining >90% cell viability and standard flow cytometry-based release criteria for phenotype and function. Based on quantitative in vivo 19F MRS measurements in the liver, we estimate that ~30% cell equivalents of adoptively transferred F-TILs have become apoptotic by 22 days post-transfer.
Conclusions
The primary cell therapy product’s survival is probably going to differ from patient to patient. Future clinical studies may be informed by a non-invasive assay of ACF over time that could shed light on the mechanisms of response and no-response. As it creates a way to quantify cellular product survival and engraftment, this information may be helpful to clinicians and developers of cytotherapies.