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Engineering of Chimeric Antigen Receptor therapy. (Left Panel) T cells are collected via …
Figure 1.
Engineering of Chimeric Antigen Receptor therapy. (Left Panel) T cells are collected via apheresis from the patient, a process that withdraws blood from the body and removes one or more blood components (such as plasma, platelets, or white blood cells). The remaining blood is then returned back into the body. T cells are re-engineered in a laboratory. The T cells are sent to a laboratory or a drug manufacturing facility, where they are genetically engineered to produce chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) on their surface. After this re-engineering, the T cells are known as chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR-T) cells. CARs are proteins that allow the T cells to recognize an antigen on targeted tumor cells. The re-engineered CAR-T cells are then multiplied. The number of the patient’s genetically modified T cells is “expanded” by growing cells in the laboratory until there are many millions of them. These CAR-T cells are frozen, and when there are enough of them, they are sent to the hospital or center where the patient is being treated. At the hospital or treatment center, the CAR-T cells are then infused into the patient. Many patients are given a brief course of one or more chemotherapy agents before they receive the infusion of CAR-T cells. CAR-T cells that have been returned to the patient’s bloodstream multiply in number. (Right panel) Kidney effects of CAR-T cell therapy. CAR-T cell infusion can lead to cytokine release syndrome due predominantly to IL-6 release along with other inflammatory cytokines. AKI results from a combination of hypoperfusion due to third spacing of fluids, hypotension, cytokine-induced cardiomyopathy, and direct inflammatory effects. AKI may be mild and prerenal or severe and due to acute tubular necrosis.
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