网络研讨会

Harnessing antigen-specific T cell response assays for multicenter immune therapy trials

六月 5, 2025

关于活动

Join investigators Megan Levings, PHD and Timothy Tree, PHD as they explore strategies to reduce inter-laboratory variability of antigen-specific T cell assays in multicenter studies together with informative assay designs and complementary methodology, relying on pre-mixed dried antibody panels and dried stimulation mixes with well standardized protocols.

Application of these principles is illustrated by recently published work on studies in T1D autoimmunity (e.g., Tatovic et al. Nat Med. 2024). Harmonizing immunophenotyping assay designs facilitates integrating findings across trials, enabling biomarker identification and validation, revealing cohort-specific features and drug mechanisms as well as monitoring of disease progression and therapy response.

Characterization of antigen-specific T cell responses typically is a critical constituent of these immunological investigations which can also aid in patient stratification for future trials. As a prerequisite, robust immune assays are needed to detect and characterize rare antigen-specific immune responses, ideally conducted directly in peripheral blood.

Common detection flow cytometry-based techniques are multimer TCR staining and antigen-induced marker (AIM) assays as well as the assessment of immune cell cytokine production.

Harnessing antigen-specific T cell response assays for multicenter immune therapy trials

Learning Objectives

  • What are commonly used methods of detecting antigen-specific T cell responses with flow cytometry?
  • What are influences that can affect data comparability for these assays in multicenter clinical trials?
  • How can I improve data comparability by smart assay setup and design?

Speakers

CAR-T Event Megan Levings

Megan Levings, PhD - Professor, Department of Surgery and School of Biomedical Engineering at the University of British Columbia. Director, Childhood Diseases Theme, BC Children's Hospital Research Institute

CAR-T Event Timothy Tree

Timothy Tree, PHD - Professor, Department of Immunobiology at Kings College London. Director, Consortium Mechanistic Core, Diabetes UK and Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation