We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

Features Partner Sites Information LinkXpress hp
Sign In
Advertise with Us
GLOBETECH PUBLISHING LLC

Download Mobile App




Imaging Technique Tracks Cancer-Killing Cells over Long Periods in First-Ever Study

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 16 Dec 2008
Print article
Persuading a patient's own cells to search and destroy infected or diseased cells is a promising therapeutic approach for many disorders. But until now, efforts to track these specially modified cells after their reintroduction to the body have relied on short-term monitoring techniques that do not provide a complete picture of the cells' status.

Now, for the first time, researchers from the Stanford University School of Medicine (CA, USA; http://med.stanford.edu) have devised a way to obtain repeated "snapshots” of the location and survival of such cells in a living human patient months and possibly years later. This is a promising application for individual patients and clinicians who may want to assess the cells' disease-fighting performance over time, as well as for researchers trying to design more effective cell-based therapies.

"This has never before been done in a human,” said the senior author of the research, Sanjiv Gambhir, M.D., Ph.D., director of Stanford's Molecular Imaging Program. "Until now, we've been shooting blind-never knowing why failed therapies didn't work. Did the cells die? Did they not get where we wanted them to go? Now we can repeatedly monitor them throughout their lifetime.” Dr. Gambhir is a professor of radiology and a member of Stanford's Cancer Center. He collaborated with researchers at City of Hope in Los Angeles (CA, USA) and at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA; USA) to conduct the research.

Dr. Gambhir and his colleagues evaluated the technique in a middle-aged man with an aggressive brain tumor (called a glioblastoma) who was enrolled in a clinical trial of cell-based therapy at City of Hope. However, they believe similar strategies will work to monitor cell-based therapies for many disorders. The results of the case study was published online November 18, 2008, in the journal Nature Clinical Practice Oncology.

The new approach relies on a two-step process: first, the therapeutic cells are engineered to express a unique reporter gene shared by no other cells in the body. Second, an imaging agent that is trapped only in cells expressing the reporter gene is injected into the patient. The unbound imaging agent is otherwise quickly cleared from the body. Each time the imaging agent is used, the researchers get a new, up-to-date map showing the cells' locations.

The technique has several advantages over previous tracking methods. Unlike an external radioactive tag, which decays over a short time and does not indicate whether a cell is living or dead, the reporter gene is expressed throughout a cell's lifetime, but not beyond. Furthermore, unlike an external tag, the reporter gene is duplicated and passed along if the original cell divides. Finally, different reporter genes can be used that may well indicate not only the location of the cells, but also what they are up to.

"In this patient, the reporter gene was always on,” said Dr. Gambhir. "But the beauty of this approach is that we could make it so the reporter gene is expressed only if the cell differentiates, or finds a certain target. Has the T cell found a tumor? Has it activated its cell-killing machinery?”

In the current study, Dr. Gambhir collaborated with Michael Jensen, M.D., associate chair of the cancer immunotherapeutics and tumor immunology program at City of Hope, and other researchers to remove cytotoxic, or "killer,” T cells from a male patient with glioblastoma. These cells naturally seek out and destroy infected or dysfunctional cells in the body. The researchers then inserted a circle of DNA encoding two key genes into these T cells. One endowed the cells with the ability to home in on the cancer cells. The other encoded a gene from a herpes simplex virus called thymide kinase, or HSV1-tk. The product of the HSV1-tk gene traps a radioactively labeled imaging molecule that can be visualized on a PET scan. Any imaging molecule that is not trapped in the modified T cells is eliminated from the body. A clinical PET-CT scanner tracks the locations of the imaging molecule and therefore the modified T cells.

The researchers then returned the modified T cells to the site of the patient's brain tumor over a period of five weeks. The patient received the imaging agent three days after the last infusion of cells. As the researchers had hoped, the following positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) imaging scan revealed that the T cells had narrowed in on the tumor. However, they also migrated through the patient's brain to highlight a second, previously unsuspected tumor site. Although this study did not evaluate the capability of the T cells to kill the tumor cells, the imaging results suggested they did indeed arrive at their targets.

"The cells were actually good at finding the tumor,” said Dr. Gambhir, who pointed out that the same technique could be used to follow other immune cells or ultimately stem cells throughout the body. He plans to collaborate with other researchers at Stanford and elsewhere to not only continue his study with T cells and other tumor types, but also to investigate the movement of therapeutic cells in patients with arthritis and diabetes. "It took all of the institutions to come together to make such a complex trial work, but, because we're not limited to just one cell population, the results are tremendously exciting.”

Related Links:
Stanford University School of Medicine
University of California, Los Angeles

New
MRI System
Ingenia Prodiva 1.5T CS
New
Portable HF X-Ray Machine
PORTX
New
X-ray Diagnostic System
FDX Visionary-A
Ultra-Flat DR Detector
meX+1717SCC

Print article

Channels

Ultrasound

view channel
Image: The addition of POC ultrasound can enhance first trimester obstetrical care (Photo courtesy of 123RF)

POC Ultrasound Enhances Early Pregnancy Care and Cuts Emergency Visits

A new study has found that implementing point-of-care ultrasounds (POCUS) in clinics to assess the viability and gestational age of pregnancies in the first trimester improved care for pregnant patients... Read more

Nuclear Medicine

view channel
Image: PSMA-PET/CT images of an 85-year-old patient with hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (Photo courtesy of Dr. Adrien Holzgreve)

Advanced Imaging Reveals Hidden Metastases in High-Risk Prostate Cancer Patients

Prostate-specific membrane antigen–positron emission tomography (PSMA-PET) imaging has become an essential tool in transforming the way prostate cancer is staged. Using small amounts of radioactive “tracers,”... Read more

Imaging IT

view channel
Image: The new Medical Imaging Suite makes healthcare imaging data more accessible, interoperable and useful (Photo courtesy of Google Cloud)

New Google Cloud Medical Imaging Suite Makes Imaging Healthcare Data More Accessible

Medical imaging is a critical tool used to diagnose patients, and there are billions of medical images scanned globally each year. Imaging data accounts for about 90% of all healthcare data1 and, until... Read more
Copyright © 2000-2025 Globetech Media. All rights reserved.