Patients undergoing immunotherapy for advanced cancer under IRB-approved protocols, who are to receive immune cells in adoptive transfer, will have less than or equal to 50% of those cells labeled with In-111-oxine and administered along with the remainder of their unlabeled cells. They will then undergo gamma-camera imaging over the next 0-7 days and blood samples and tumor sites which are accessible with minimal surgery (low-risk biopsy) may be sampled in some patients for enumeration of radiolabeled cells. End-points will be tumor and normal organ imaging and the amount of In-111 per gram of tissue in biopsies or per ml. of blood.
Patients undergoing immunotherapy for advanced cancer under IRB-approved protocols, who are to receive immune cells in adoptive transfer, will have less than or equal to 50% of those cells labeled with In-111-oxine and administered along with the remainder of their unlabeled cells. They will then undergo gamma-camera imaging over the next 0-7 days and blood samples and tumor sites which are accessible with minimal surgery (low-risk biopsy) may be sampled in some patients for enumeration of radiolabeled cells. End-points will be tumor and normal organ imaging and the amount of In-111 per gram of tissue in biopsies or per ml. of blood.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Purpose
TREATMENT
Enrollment
100
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Bethesda, Maryland, United States
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