4.5 Review

Probing immune infiltration dynamics in cancer by in vivo imaging

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 67, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpa.2022.102117

Keywords

Positron emission tomography; Magnetic resonance imaging; Intravital; microscopy; Tumor associated macrophages; Adoptive cell therapy

Funding

  1. Thrall Innovation Grant
  2. Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital
  3. NIH [1K22CA226040, DP2CA259675]
  4. Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Innovation Research Fund Basic Research Grant
  5. NIH/NCI [R00CA207744]

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This review article discusses recent progress in the translational development of probes for in vivo leukocyte imaging, focusing on the complementary perspectives provided by imaging of T-cells, phagocytic macrophages, and their responses to therapy.
Cancer immunotherapies typically aim to stimulate the accumulation and activity of cytotoxic T-cells or pro-inflammatory antigen-presenting cells, reduce immunosuppressive myeloid cells or regulatory T-cells, or elicit some combination of effects thereof. Notwithstanding the encouraging results, immunotherapies such as PD-1/PD-L1-targeted immune checkpoint blockade act heterogeneously across individual patients. It remains challenging to predict and monitor individual responses, especially across multiple sites of metastasis or sites of potential toxicity. To address this need, in vivo imaging of both adaptive and innate immune cell populations has emerged as a tool to quantify spatial leukocyte accumulation in tumors non invasively. Here we review recent progress in the translational development of probes for in vivo leukocyte imaging, focusing on complementary perspectives provided by imaging of T-cells, phagocytic macrophages, and their responses to therapy.

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