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Noninvasive interrogation of CD8+ T cell effector function for monitoring early tumor responses to immunotherapy
Haoyi Zhou, Yanpu Wang, Hongchuang Xu, Xiuling Shen, Ting Zhang, Xin Zhou, Yuwen Zeng, Kui Li, Li Zhang, Hua Zhu, Xing Yang, Nan Li, Zhi Yang, Zhaofei Liu
Haoyi Zhou, Yanpu Wang, Hongchuang Xu, Xiuling Shen, Ting Zhang, Xin Zhou, Yuwen Zeng, Kui Li, Li Zhang, Hua Zhu, Xing Yang, Nan Li, Zhi Yang, Zhaofei Liu
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Research Article Oncology

Noninvasive interrogation of CD8+ T cell effector function for monitoring early tumor responses to immunotherapy

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Abstract

Accurately identifying patients who respond to immunotherapy remains clinically challenging. A noninvasive method that can longitudinally capture information about immune cell function and assist in the early assessment of tumor responses is highly desirable for precision immunotherapy. Here, we show that PET imaging using a granzyme B–targeted radiotracer named 68Ga-grazytracer, could noninvasively and effectively predict tumor responses to immune checkpoint inhibitors and adoptive T cell transfer therapy in multiple tumor models. 68Ga-grazytracer was designed and selected from several radiotracers based on non-aldehyde peptidomimetics, and exhibited excellent in vivo metabolic stability and favorable targeting efficiency to granzyme B secreted by effector CD8+ T cells during immune responses. 68Ga-grazytracer permitted more sensitive discrimination of responders and nonresponders than did 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose, distinguishing between tumor pseudoprogression and true progression upon immune checkpoint blockade therapy in mouse models with varying immunogenicity. In a preliminary clinical trial with 5 patients, no adverse events were observed after 68Ga-grazytracer injection, and clinical responses in cancer patients undergoing immunotherapy were favorably correlated with 68Ga-grazytracer PET results. These results highlight the potential of 68Ga-grazytracer PET to enhance the clinical effectiveness of granzyme B secretion–related immunotherapies by supporting early response assessment and precise patient stratification in a noninvasive and longitudinal manner.

Authors

Haoyi Zhou, Yanpu Wang, Hongchuang Xu, Xiuling Shen, Ting Zhang, Xin Zhou, Yuwen Zeng, Kui Li, Li Zhang, Hua Zhu, Xing Yang, Nan Li, Zhi Yang, Zhaofei Liu

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Figure 1

18F-FDG PET/CT images of a representative case of tumor pseudoprogression after ICI therapy.

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18F-FDG PET/CT images of a representative case of tumor pseudoprogressi...
(A) The representative case was a 61-year-old man with lung squamous cell carcinoma (clinical stage cT3N1M0) receiving ipilimumab plus nivolumab. Baseline 18F-FDG PET/CT shows the SUVmax of the mass to be 13.6 and the SULpeak to be 7.1. Interim PET/CT after 1 cycle of immunotherapy (1 month) shows that 18F-FDG uptake of the mass was increased, with a SUVmax of 20.1 and SULpeak of 10.9 (PMD with PERCIST criteria). PET/CT after 3 cycles of therapy (4 months) shows that the 18F-FDG uptake in the mass decreased to a SUVmax of 15.5 and SULpeak of 7.2 (PMR with PERCIST criteria). Tumors are indicated by red arrows. (B) The SUVmax and SULpeak of 18F-FDG PET/CT at different stages of immunotherapy.

Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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