In vivo imaging of nanoparticle-labeled CAR T cells

Louise Kiru(Stanford University), Aimen Zlitni(Stanford University), Aidan M. Tousley(Stanford University), Guillermo Nicolás Dalton(Stanford University), Wei Wu(Stanford University), Famyrah Lafortune(Stanford University), Anna Liu(Georgia Institute of Technology), Kristen Cunanan(Stanford University), Hossein Nejadnik(Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania), Todd Sulchek(Georgia Institute of Technology), Michael E. Moseley(Stanford University), Robbie G. Majzner(Stanford University), Heike E. Daldrup‐Link(Stanford University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
January 31, 2022
Cited by 133Open Access
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Abstract

Metastatic osteosarcoma has a poor prognosis with a 2-y, event-free survival rate of ∼15 to 20%, highlighting the need for the advancement of efficacious therapeutics. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy is a potent strategy for eliminating tumors by harnessing the immune system. However, clinical trials with CAR T cells in solid tumors have encountered significant challenges and have not yet demonstrated convincing evidence of efficacy for a large number of patients. A major bottleneck for the success of CAR T-cell therapy is our inability to monitor the accumulation of the CAR T cells in the tumor with clinical-imaging techniques. To address this, we developed a clinically translatable approach for labeling CAR T cells with iron oxide nanoparticles, which enabled the noninvasive detection of the iron-labeled T cells with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), photoacoustic imaging (PAT), and magnetic particle imaging (MPI). Using a custom-made microfluidics device for T-cell labeling by mechanoporation, we achieved significant nanoparticle uptake in the CAR T cells, while preserving T-cell proliferation, viability, and function. Multimodal MRI, PAT, and MPI demonstrated homing of the T cells to osteosarcomas and off-target sites in animals administered with T cells labeled with the iron oxide nanoparticles, while T cells were not visualized in animals infused with unlabeled cells. This study details the successful labeling of CAR T cells with ferumoxytol, thereby paving the way for monitoring CAR T cells in solid tumors.


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