First-in-human immunoPET imaging of COVID-19 convalescent patients using dynamic total-body PET and a CD8-targeted minibody

Author:

Omidvari NegarORCID,Jones Terry,Price Pat M,Ferre April L,Lu Jacqueline,Abdelhafez Yasser G,Sen Fatma,Cohen Stuart H,Schmiedehausen Kristin,Badawi Ramsey D,Shacklett Barbara L,Wilson Ian,Cherry Simon R

Abstract

AbstractWith the majority of CD8+T cells residing and functioning in tissue, not blood, developing noninvasive methods forin vivoquantification of their biodistribution and kinetics in humans offers the means for studying their key role in adaptive immune response and memory. This study is the first report on using positron emission tomography (PET) dynamic imaging and compartmental kinetic modeling forin vivomeasurement of whole-body biodistribution of CD8+T cells in human subjects. For this, a89Zr-labeled minibody with high affinity for human CD8 (89Zr-Df-Crefmirlimab) was used with total-body PET in healthy subjects (N=3) and in COVID-19 convalescent patients (N=5). The high detection sensitivity, total-body coverage, and the use of dynamic scans enabled the study of kinetics simultaneously in spleen, bone marrow, liver, lungs, thymus, lymph nodes, and tonsils, at reduced radiation doses compared to prior studies. Analysis and modeling of the kinetics was consistent with T cell trafficking effects expected from immunobiology of lymphoid organs, suggesting early uptake in spleen and bone marrow followed by redistribution and delayed increasing uptake in lymph nodes, tonsils, and thymus. Tissue-to-blood ratios from the first 7 h of CD8-targeted imaging showed significantly higher values in the bone marrow of COVID-19 patients compared to controls, with an increasing trend between 2 and 6 months post-infection, consistent with net influx rates obtained by kinetic modeling and flow cytometry analysis of peripheral blood samples. These results provide the platform for using dynamic PET scans and kinetic modelling to study total-body immunological response and memory.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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