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1.
Cytotherapy ; 23(9): 757-773, 2021 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33832818

ABSTRACT

Cell-based therapies have been making great advances toward clinical reality. Despite the increase in trial activity, few therapies have successfully navigated late-phase clinical trials and received market authorization. One possible explanation for this is that additional tools and technologies to enable their development have only recently become available. To support the safety evaluation of cell therapies, the Health and Environmental Sciences Institute Cell Therapy-Tracking, Circulation and Safety Committee, a multisector collaborative committee, polled the attendees of the 2017 International Society for Cell & Gene Therapy conference in London, UK, to understand the gaps and needs that cell therapy developers have encountered regarding safety evaluations in vivo. The goal of the survey was to collect information to inform stakeholders of areas of interest that can help ensure the safe use of cellular therapeutics in the clinic. This review is a response to the cellular imaging interests of those respondents. The authors offer a brief overview of available technologies and then highlight the areas of interest from the survey by describing how imaging technologies can meet those needs. The areas of interest include imaging of cells over time, sensitivity of imaging modalities, ability to quantify cells, imaging cellular survival and differentiation and safety concerns around adding imaging agents to cellular therapy protocols. The Health and Environmental Sciences Institute Cell Therapy-Tracking, Circulation and Safety Committee believes that the ability to understand therapeutic cell fate is vital for determining and understanding cell therapy efficacy and safety and offers this review to aid in those needs. An aim of this article is to share the available imaging technologies with the cell therapy community to demonstrate how these technologies can accomplish unmet needs throughout the translational process and strengthen the understanding of cellular therapeutics.

2.
Nat Med ; 18(3): 463-7, 2012 Feb 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22366951

ABSTRACT

We report on a new straightforward magnetic cell-labeling approach that combines three US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drugs--ferumoxytol, heparin and protamine--in serum-free medium to form self-assembling nanocomplexes that effectively label cells for in vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We observed that the ferumoxytol-heparin-protamine (HPF) nanocomplexes were stable in serum-free cell culture medium. HPF nanocomplexes show a threefold increase in T2 relaxivity compared to ferumoxytol. Electron microscopy showed internalized HPF in endosomes, which we confirmed by Prussian blue staining of labeled cells. There was no long-term effect or toxicity on cellular physiology or function of HPF-labeled hematopoietic stem cells, bone marrow stromal cells, neural stem cells or T cells when compared to controls. In vivo MRI detected 1,000 HPF-labeled cells implanted in rat brains. This HPF labeling method should facilitate the monitoring by MRI of infused or implanted cells in clinical trials.


Subject(s)
Brain/cytology , Cell Tracking/methods , Ferrosoferric Oxide/chemistry , Heparin/chemistry , Magnetite Nanoparticles/administration & dosage , Magnetite Nanoparticles/adverse effects , Magnetite Nanoparticles/chemistry , Protamines/chemistry , Animals , Apoptosis/drug effects , Bone Marrow Cells/cytology , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/ultrastructure , Cell Differentiation/drug effects , Clinical Trials as Topic , Culture Media, Serum-Free , Endosomes/ultrastructure , Ferrosoferric Oxide/administration & dosage , Ferrosoferric Oxide/adverse effects , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/cytology , Heparin/administration & dosage , Heparin/adverse effects , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Magnetite Nanoparticles/ultrastructure , Male , Mesenchymal Stem Cells/cytology , Microscopy, Electron , Neurons/cytology , Protamines/administration & dosage , Protamines/adverse effects , Radiography , Rats , Stem Cell Transplantation , Stromal Cells/cytology , T-Lymphocytes/cytology
3.
PLoS One ; 4(9): e7218, 2009 Sep 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19787043

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Treatment strategies for the highly invasive brain tumor, glioblastoma multiforme, require that cells which have invaded into the surrounding brain be specifically targeted. The inherent tumor-tropism of neural stem cells (NSCs) to primary and invasive tumor foci can be exploited to deliver therapeutics to invasive brain tumor cells in humans. Use of the strategy of converting prodrug to drug via therapeutic transgenes delivered by immortalized therapeutic NSC lines have shown efficacy in animal models. Thus therapeutic NSCs are being proposed for use in human brain tumor clinical trials. In the context of NSC-based therapies, MRI can be used both to non-invasively follow dynamic spatio-temporal patterns of the NSC tumor targeting allowing for the optimization of treatment strategies and to assess efficacy of the therapy. Iron-labeling of cells allows their presence to be visualized and tracked by MRI. Thus we aimed to iron-label therapeutic NSCs without affecting their cellular physiology using a method likely to gain United States Federal Drug Administration (FDA) approval. METHODOLOGY: For human use, the characteristics of therapeutic Neural Stem Cells must be clearly defined with any pertubation to the cell including iron labeling requiring reanalysis of cellular physiology. Here, we studied the effect of iron-loading of the therapeutic NSCs, with ferumoxide-protamine sulfate complex (FE-Pro) on viability, proliferation, migratory properties and transgene expression, when compared to non-labeled cells. FE-Pro labeled NSCs were imaged by MRI at tumor sites, after intracranial administration into the hemisphere contralateral to the tumor, in an orthotopic human glioma xenograft mouse model. CONCLUSION: FE-Pro labeled NSCs retain their proliferative status, tumor tropism, and maintain stem cell character, while allowing in vivo cellular MRI tracking at 7 Tesla, to monitor their real-time migration and distribution at brain tumor sites. Of significance, this work directly supports the use of FE-Pro-labeled NSCs for real-time tracking in the clinical trial under development: "A Pilot Feasibility Study of Oral 5-Fluorocytosine and Genetically modified Neural Stem Cells Expressing Escherichia coli Cytosine Deaminase for Treatment of Recurrent High-Grade Gliomas".


Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms/pathology , Glioma/pathology , Iron/metabolism , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Neurons/cytology , Stem Cells/cytology , Animals , Brain/metabolism , Brain Neoplasms/metabolism , Dextrans , Disease Models, Animal , Ferrosoferric Oxide/chemistry , Glioma/metabolism , Humans , Magnetite Nanoparticles , Mice , Neoplasm Transplantation , Protamines/chemistry
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