9-(4-fluoro-3-hydroxymethylbutyl)guanine and Graft-vs-Host-Disease

9-(4-fluoro-3-hydroxymethylbutyl)guanine has been researched along with Graft-vs-Host-Disease* in 1 studies

Trials

1 trial(s) available for 9-(4-fluoro-3-hydroxymethylbutyl)guanine and Graft-vs-Host-Disease

ArticleYear
[(18)F]FHBG PET/CT Imaging of CD34-TK75 Transduced Donor T Cells in Relapsed Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplant Patients: Safety and Feasibility.
    Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy, 2015, Volume: 23, Issue:6

    Described herein is a first-in-man attempt to both genetically modify T cells with an imagable suicide gene and track these transduced donor T cells in allogeneic stem cell transplantation recipients using noninvasive positron emission tomography/computerized tomography (PET/CT) imaging. A suicide gene encoding a human CD34-Herpes Simplex Virus-1-thymidine kinase (CD34-TK75) fusion enabled enrichment of retrovirally transduced T cells (TdT), control of graft-versus-host disease and imaging of TdT migration and expansion in vivo in mice and man. Analysis confirmed that CD34-TK75-enriched TdT contained no replication competent γ-retrovirus, were sensitive to ganciclovir, and displayed characteristic retroviral insertion sites (by targeted sequencing). Affinity-purified CD34-TK75(+)-selected donor T cells (1.0-13 × 10(5))/kg were infused into eight patients who relapsed after allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Six patients also were administered 9-[4-((18)F)fluoro-3-hydroxymethyl-butyl]guanine ([(18)F]FHBG) to specifically track the genetically modified donor T cells by PET/CT at several time points after infusion. All patients were assessed for graft-versus-host disease, response to ganciclovir, circulating TdT cells (using both quantitative polymerase chain reaction and [(18)F]FHBG PET/CT imaging), TdT cell clonal expansion, and immune response to the TdT. This phase 1 trial demonstrated that genetically modified T cells and [(18)F]FHBG can be safely infused in patients with relapsed hematologic malignancies after allogeneic stem cell transplantation.

    Topics: Animals; Antigens, CD34; Cell Line, Tumor; Feasibility Studies; Flow Cytometry; Ganciclovir; Graft vs Host Disease; Guanine; Herpesvirus 1, Human; Humans; Leukocytes, Mononuclear; Mice; NIH 3T3 Cells; Pilot Projects; Positron-Emission Tomography; Stem Cell Transplantation; T-Lymphocytes; Thymidine Kinase; Transduction, Genetic; Transplantation, Homologous; Treatment Outcome

2015