The presentation of leukemic antigens can be improved in AML and MDS by in vitro conversion of leukemic cells in leukemia-derived DC (DCleu), thereby forming a platform for the generation of leukemia-specific cytotoxic lymphocytes (CTL). In preliminary analyses we could already define optimal serum-free culture conditions, generate and characterize DC from 55 MDS- and 99 AML-cases and characterize their T-cell activating function (Kufner S. 2005 I-III). DC/DCleu were quantified according to their surface DC /blast -marker profiles. However in 6/30% of cases with AML/MDS less than 10% of DC could be generated and only 50–60% of leukemic cells were convertible to DCleu. Therefore we tested 5 alternative methods to improve the harvest of DC/DCleu in 99 AML and 55 MDS-patients (1) ‘MCM-mimic’ (Lee, 2003), 2) ‘Ca-Ionophore’ (Houtenbos, 2003), 3) ‘Picibanil’ (Sato, 2003), 4) ‘Cytokines’ (Westers, 2003) and 5) ‘Poly I:C’ (Rouas, 2004)). 1. Although the percentual harvest of DC/DCleu was comparable in all of the methods (28–40% DC, with 45–65% of those DC being DCleu and about 47% of blasts being convertible to DCleu) not every method was successful in individual patients. 2. However we could demonstrate that DC can be generated from every sample with at least one of the following methods: MCM-mimic, Ca-Ionophore and Picibanil. 3. Highest DC/DCleu yield was seen in monocytoid differentiated FAB-types and was independent of the cytogenetic risk. 4. Many ‘DC-surface markers’ can be aready expressed on naive blasts in AML/MDS-patients before there conversion to DCleu. Moreover the ‘DC-marker expression’ is variable in individual patients and culture methods.

In summary our data show 1. that the generation of DC/DCleu is possible independent from the karyotype in every patient under serum-free conditions with at least one of the 3 methods MCM-mimic, Ca-Ionophore and Picibanil. 2. The overall percentual harvest of DCleu from MNC-fractions after culture in the 5 methods compared is low. Possibly a combination of the optimal method with optimal ‘DC- and blast markers’ in every single case could improve the detectability and quantification of DC/DCleu and residual blasts. This contributes to improve the generability and quality of DCleu to stimulate and expand anti-leukemia-directed T-cells for the immunotherapy of AML and MDS.

Author notes

Corresponding author

Sign in via your Institution