Abstract

Adoptive cellular therapies with T cells are increasingly used to treat a variety of conditions. For instance, in a recent phase 1/2 trial, we prophylactically administered multivirus-specific T-cell products to protect recipients of T-cell-depleted allogeneic stem cell grafts against viral reactivation. To establish treatment efficacy, it is important to determine the fate of the individual transferred T-cell populations. However, it is difficult to unequivocally distinguish progeny of the transferred T-cell products from recipient- or stem cell graft-derived T cells that survived T-cell depletion during conditioning or stem cell graft manipulation. Using messenger RNA sequencing of the T-cell receptor β-chains of the individual virus-specific T-cell populations within these T-cell products, we were able to track the multiple clonal virus-specific subpopulations in peripheral blood and distinguish recipient- and stem cell graft-derived virus-specific T cells from the progeny of the infused T-cell products. We observed invivo expansion of virus-specific T cells that were exclusively derived from the T-cell products with similar kinetics as the expansion of virus-specific Tcells that could also be detected before the T-cell product infusion. In addition, we demonstrated persistence of virus-specific T cells derived from the T-cell products in most patients who did not show viral reactivation. This study demonstrates that virus-specific Tcells from prophylactically infused multiantigen-specific T-cell products can expand in response to antigen encounter invivo and even persist in the absence of early viral reactivation.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call