Long-term in vitro expansion ensures increased yield of central memory T cells as perspective for manufacturing challenges

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Abstract

Adoptive T cell therapy (ATT) has revolutionized the treatment of cancer patients. A sufficient number of functional T cells are indispensable for ATT efficacy; however, several ATT dropouts have been reported due to T cell expansion failure or lack of T cell persistence in vivo. With the aim of providing ATT also to those patients experiencing insufficient T cell manufacturing via standard protocol, we evaluated if minimally manipulative prolongation of in vitro expansion (long-term [LT] >3 weeks with IL-7 and IL-15 cytokines) could result in enhanced T cell yield with preserved T cell functionality. The extended expansion resulted in a 39-fold increase of murine CD8+ T central memory cells (Tcm). LT expanded CD8+ and CD4+ Tcm cells retained a gene expression profile related to Tcm and T memory stem cells (Tscm). In vivo transfer of LT expanded Tcm revealed persistence and antitumor capacity. We confirmed our in vitro findings on human T cells, on healthy donors and diffuse large B cell lymphoma patients, undergoing salvage therapy. Our study demonstrates the feasibility of an extended T cell expansion as a practicable alternative for patients with insufficient numbers of T cells after the standard manufacturing process thereby increasing ATT accessibility.

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APA

Herda, S., Heimann, A., Obermayer, B., Ciraolo, E., Althoff, S., Ruß, J., … Na, I. K. (2021). Long-term in vitro expansion ensures increased yield of central memory T cells as perspective for manufacturing challenges. International Journal of Cancer, 148(12), 3097–3110. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.33523

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