Development of a clinical-scale method for generation of dendritic cells from PBMC for use in cancer immunotherapy.
Journal: 2003/January - Cytotherapy
ISSN: 1465-3249
Abstract:
BACKGROUND
There is growing interest in the use of dendritic cells (DCs) for treatment of malignancy and infectious disease. Our goal was to develop a clinical scale method to prepare autologous DCs for cancer clinical trials.
METHODS
PBMC were collected from normal donors or cancer patients by automated leukapheresis, purified by counterflow centrifugal elutriation and placed into culture in polystyrene flasks at 1 x 10(6) cells/mL for 5-7 days at 37 degrees C, with 5% CO(2), with IL-4 and GM-CSF. Conditions investigated included media formulation, supplementation with heat in activated allogeneic AB serum or autologous plasma and time to harvest (Day 5 or Day 7). DCs were evaluated for morphology, quantitative yield, viability, phenotype and function, including mixed leukocyte response and recall response to tetanus toxoid and influenza virus.
RESULTS
DCs with a typical immature phenotype (CD14-negative, CD1a-positive, mannose receptor-positive, CD80-positive, CD83-negative) were generated most consistently in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% allogeneic AB serum or 10% autologous plasma. Cell yield was higher at Day 5 than Day 7, without detectable differences in phenotype or function. In pediatric sarcoma patients, autologous DCs had enhanced function compared with monocytes from which they were generated. In this patient group, starting with 8.0 +/- 3.7 x 10(8) fresh or cryopreserved autologous monocytes, DC yield was 2.1 +/- 1.0 x 10(8) cells, or 29% of the starting monocyte number.
CONCLUSIONS
In the optimized clinical-scale method, purified peripheral monocytes are cultured for 5 days in flasks at 1 x 10(6) cells/mL in RPMI 1640, 10% allogeneic AB serum or autologous plasma, IL-4 and GM-CSF. This method avoids the use of FBS and results in immature DCs suitable for clinical trials.
Relations:
Citations
(13)
Grants
(25)
Diseases
(1)
Drugs
(4)
Chemicals
(3)
Organisms
(1)
Processes
(6)
Anatomy
(2)
Similar articles
Articles by the same authors
Discussion board
Collaboration tool especially designed for Life Science professionals.Drag-and-drop any entity to your messages.