TY - JOUR T1 - Harnessing the lymphocyte meta-phenotype to optimize adoptive cell therapy JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/085910 SP - 085910 AU - John Mullinax AU - Cliona O’Farrelly AU - Jacob G. Scott AU - Andreas Buttenschön AU - Asmaa E. Elkenawi AU - Fadoua El Moustaid AU - Alexander G. Fletcher AU - Clemens Grassberger AU - Eunjung Kim AU - Andriy Marusyk AU - Harry L.O. McClelland AU - Daria Miroshnychenko AU - Daniel Nichol Y1 - 2016/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/11/05/085910.abstract N2 - There is an urgent need for reliable effective therapy for patients with metastatic sarcoma. Approaches that manipulate the immune system have shown promise for patients with advanced, widely disseminated malignancies. One of these approaches is adoptive cell therapy (ACT), where tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) are isolated from the tumor, expanded ex vivo, and then transferred back to the patient. This approach has shown great promise in melanoma, leading to an objective response in approximately half of treated patients [14]. Standard protocols involve characterization of TIL populations with respect to adaptive CD4+ and CD8+ T-lymphocytes, but neglect the possible role of the innate lymphoid repertoire. Due to toxicity and the high cost associated with ACT, the IFN-γ release assay is currently used as a proxy to identify suitable TIL isolates for ACT. Efforts in TIL-ACT for sarcoma, which are pre-clinical and pioneered at Moffitt Cancer Center, have shown that only a minority of the TIL cultures show tumor specific activity in ex vivo IFN-γ assays. Surprisingly, internal melanoma trial data reveal a lack of correlation between IFN-γ assay and clinical outcomes, highlighting the need for a more reliable proxy. We hypothesize the existence of a predictable TIL meta-phenotype that leads to optimal tumor response. Here, we describe preliminary efforts to integrate prospective and existing patient data with mathematical models to optimize the TIL meta-phenotype prior to re-injection. ER -