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Quantifying the limits of CAR T-cell delivery in mice and men
Authors:Liam V Brown  Eamonn A Gaffney  Ann Ager  Jonathan Wagg  Mark C Coles
Affiliation:1.Wolfson Centre For Mathematical Biology, Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK;2.Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK;3.Systems Immunity University Research Institute and Division of Infection and Immunity, School of Medicine, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK;4.EPFL Innovation Park, AC Immune SA, Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract:CAR (Chimeric Antigen Receptor) T cells have demonstrated clinical success for the treatment of multiple lymphomas and leukaemias, but not for various solid tumours, despite promising data from murine models. Lower effective CAR T-cell delivery rates to human solid tumours compared to haematological malignancies in humans and solid tumours in mice might partially explain these divergent outcomes. We used anatomical and physiological data for human and rodent circulatory systems to calculate the typical perfusion of healthy and tumour tissues, and estimated the upper limits of immune cell delivery rates across different organs, tumour types and species. Estimated maximum delivery rates were up to 10 000-fold greater in mice than humans yet reported CAR T-cell doses are typically only 10–100-fold lower in mice, suggesting that the effective delivery rates of CAR T cells into tumours in clinical trials are far lower than in corresponding mouse models. Estimated delivery rates were found to be consistent with published positron emission tomography data. Results suggest that higher effective human doses may be needed to drive efficacy comparable to mouse solid tumour models, and that lower doses should be tested in mice. We posit that quantitation of species and organ-specific delivery and homing of engineered T cells will be key to unlocking their potential for solid tumours.
Keywords:trafficking  CAR  T cell  immunotherapy  failure  modelling
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