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CART math -A Mathematical Model of CAR-T Immunotherapy in Preclinical Studies of Hematological Cancers.

Authors :
Barros LRC
Paixão EA
Valli AMP
Naozuka GT
Fassoni AC
Almeida RC
Source :
Cancers [Cancers (Basel)] 2021 Jun 11; Vol. 13 (12). Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Jun 11.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Immunotherapy has gained great momentum with chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) therapy, in which patient's T lymphocytes are genetically manipulated to recognize tumor-specific antigens, increasing tumor elimination efficiency. In recent years, CAR-T cell immunotherapy for hematological malignancies achieved a great response rate in patients and is a very promising therapy for several other malignancies. Each new CAR design requires a preclinical proof-of-concept experiment using immunodeficient mouse models. The absence of a functional immune system in these mice makes them simple and suitable for use as mathematical models. In this work, we develop a three-population mathematical model to describe tumor response to CAR-T cell immunotherapy in immunodeficient mouse models, encompassing interactions between a non-solid tumor and CAR-T cells (effector and long-term memory). We account for several phenomena, such as tumor-induced immunosuppression, memory pool formation, and conversion of memory into effector CAR-T cells in the presence of new tumor cells. Individual donor and tumor specificities are considered uncertainties in the model parameters. Our model is able to reproduce several CAR-T cell immunotherapy scenarios, with different CAR receptors and tumor targets reported in the literature. We found that therapy effectiveness mostly depends on specific parameters such as the differentiation of effector to memory CAR-T cells, CAR-T cytotoxic capacity, tumor growth rate, and tumor-induced immunosuppression. In summary, our model can contribute to reducing and optimizing the number of in vivo experiments with in silico tests to select specific scenarios that could be tested in experimental research. Such an in silico laboratory is an easy-to-run open-source simulator, built on a Shiny R-based platform called CART math . It contains the results of this manuscript as examples and documentation. The developed model together with the CART math platform have potential use in assessing different CAR-T cell immunotherapy protocols and its associated efficacy, becoming an accessory for in silico trials.<br />Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2072-6694
Volume :
13
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34208323
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13122941