A rapid method to assess the in vivo multi-functionality of adoptively transferred engineered TCR T cells

Immunother Adv. 2024 Sep 18;4(1):ltae007. doi: 10.1093/immadv/ltae007. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Introduction: The clinical efficacy of chimeric antigen and T cell receptor (TCR) T cell immunotherapies is attributed to their ability to proliferate and persist in vivo. Since the interaction of the engineered T cells with the targeted tumour or its environment might suppress their function, their functionality should be characterized not only before but also after adoptive transfer.

Materials and methods: We sought to achieve this by adapting a recently developed Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) rapid whole blood T cell assay to stimulate engineered TCR T cells in small volumes of whole blood (<1 ml) without in vitro cellular purification. As a proof-of-concept, we used this method to longitudinally study two patients with primary Hepatitis B Virus (HBV)-related hepatocellular carcinoma who received multiple dose-escalating infusions of transiently functional mRNA-engineered HBV-TCR T cells.

Results: We demonstrated that a simple pulsing of whole blood with a peptide corresponding to the epitope recognized by the specific HBV-TCR elicited Th1 cytokine secretion in both patients only after HBV-TCR T cell treatment and not before. The amount of cytokines secreted also showed an infusion-dose-dependent association.

Discussions: These findings support the utility of the whole blood cytokine release assay in monitoring the in vivo function and quantity of engineered T cell products following adoptive transfer.

Keywords: T cell therapy; adoptive cell transfer; hepatitis B; hepatocellular carcinoma.