Survival and Tumor Localization of Adoptively Transferred Melan-A-Specific T Cells in Melanoma Patients

  • Meidenbauer N
  • Marienhagen J
  • Laumer M
  • et al.
147Citations
Citations of this article
64Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Adoptive T cell therapy has been successfully used for treatment of viral and malignant diseases. However, little is known about the fate and trafficking of transferred Ag-specific T cells. Using the tetramer (TM) technology which allows for detection and quantification of Ag-specific CTL, we assessed the frequency of circulating Melan-A-specific CTL in advanced melanoma patients during adoptive T cell therapy. Melan-A-specific CTL were generated from HLA-A2.1+ patients by in vitro stimulation of CD8+ T cells with dendritic cells pulsed with a mutated HLA-A2-binding Melan-A (ELAGIGILTV) peptide. Eight patients received three infusions of 0.25–11 × 108 Melan-A-specific CTL i.v. at 2-wk intervals along with low-dose IL-2. The transferred T cell product contained a mean of 42.1% Melan-A-TM+ CTL. Before therapy, the frequencies of Melan-A-specific CTL in patients’ circulating CD8+ T cells ranged from 0.01 to 0.07%. Characterization of the TM frequencies before and at different time points after transfer revealed an increase of circulating Melan-A-specific CTL up to 2%, correlating well with the number of transferred CTL. An elevated frequency of TM+ T cells was demonstrated up to 14 days after transfer, suggesting long-term survival and/or proliferation of transferred CTL. Combining TM analysis with a flow cytometry-based cytokine secretion assay, unimpaired production of IFN-γ was demonstrated in vivo for at least 24 h after transfer. Indium-111 labeling of Melan-A-specific CTL demonstrated localization of transferred CTL to metastatic sites as early as 48 h after injection. Overall, the results suggest that in vitro-generated Melan-A-specific CTL survive intact in vivo for several weeks and localize preferentially to tumor.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Meidenbauer, N., Marienhagen, J., Laumer, M., Vogl, S., Heymann, J., Andreesen, R., & Mackensen, A. (2003). Survival and Tumor Localization of Adoptively Transferred Melan-A-Specific T Cells in Melanoma Patients. The Journal of Immunology, 170(4), 2161–2169. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.170.4.2161

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free