In this Tech Spotlight we will present the principles of absolute counting and the advantages this service provides when used in combination with tumor immunophenotypic analysis.
Absolute counting is an application that allows flow cytometry scientists to quantify the total number of cells within tissue and can be used as a measurement of tumor infiltration by immune cells. In this Tech Spotlight we will present the principles of absolute counting and the advantages this service provides when used in combination with tumor immunophenotypic analysis.
The ability to accurately measure dynamic changes in the immune response within the tumor microenvironment (TME) is critical when testing new immune modulating therapies. While the configuration of robust immunophenotyping panels is necessary to delineate subsets with precision, the method by which these endpoints are reported can impact how the data is ultimately interpreted. A common readout is “% of CD45+ cells,” which measures the relative distribution of each subset as a percent of total immune cells.1,2 This method is valuable because it helps quantify the effect that therapy has on the proportion of subsets with different pro- and anti-tumor activities. For example, an increase in the proportion of CD8+ T cells with a corresponding decrease in regulatory T cells indicates that treatment has reduced regulatory T cell-mediated immuno-suppression in the TME.
The use of distribution measurements as a sole readout however, has limitations. This is demonstrated in the example below. In this study, CT26 tumor-bearing mice were treated with an anti-mCTLA-4 checkpoint inhibitor that resulted in marked tumor growth inhibition (Figure 1). To examine the mechanism of action, we first used flow cytometry to profile the distribution of tumor-derived CD3+ and CD11b+ cells (T cells and myeloid cells, respectively) among the total CD45+ cells (see figure 2). The interpreter might conclude from this data that CTLA-4 blockade triggered both an increase in the number of T cells and a simultaneous decrease in myeloid cells. This would suggest that mechanistic activity of treatment is mediated by an expansion in the number of anti-tumor CD8+ T cells as well as a contraction of immuno-suppressive myeloid cells. As you’ll see below, this conclusion would be incorrect.