
Research shows that a new noninvasive positron emission tomography (PET) imaging agent, 18F-AlF-FAPI-74, can help clinicians predict patient response to chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy, as well as monitor treatment effectiveness. They presented their results at the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging Annual Meeting.
CAR T-cell therapy is an emerging treatment that has had great success against blood cancers and is still being studied in solid tumors. The treatment involves removing T cells from a patient’s body, engineering them in a laboratory, then returning them to the patient.
“Our understanding of why CAR T-cell therapies are not as effective in solid tumors could be advanced by measuring CAR-T–targeted antigens, such as the fibroblast activation protein (FAP), which is overproduced in many types of solid tumors,” said lead author Iris Lee, of the University of Pennsylvania. “In this study, we used 18F-AlF-FAPI-74 PET to image FAP with the goal of providing information that could aid in the development and optimization of FAP CAR T-cell treatment for solid tumors.”