Celsense
Celsense, Inc. is a privately held biotechnology company offering pre-clinical and clinical-grade imaging agents used to non-invasively detect, identify, quantify, and monitor cells and cellular activity. The company is based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It was founded in 2005 to commercialize imaging platforms developed at Carnegie Mellon University.
Celsense makes proprietary imaging agents for cell trafficking using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques. The company's products are used primarily to understand regenerative medicine, immunotherapy, inflammation, and immune system response. There are over 100 peer reviewed articles in the academic literature describing cell trafficking in vivo using Celsense products. The first clinical trial involving the use of Cell Sense CS-1000 was completed in 2014. Additional clinical trials are pending in the US and Canada.
Products
- Cell Sense:[1] is a fluorocarbon tracer agent used to safely and efficiently label cells ex vivo without the use of transfection agents. Labeled cells are transplanted into the patient enabling researchers and clinicians to non-invasively track the administration and migration of therapeutic and/or diagnostic cells using 19F MRI or MRS. Applications include tracking cells in immunotherapy or regenerative medicine as well as diagnosis of inflammatory sites by tracking selected populations of immune cells. Investigators can quantify the number of labeled cells in a user-specified region of interest.[2] It is expected that in vivo cellular imaging will routinely be used to provide a surrogate biomarker for certain cell therapy and drug trials.
- V-Sense:[3] an injectable fluorocarbon MRI tracer agent that labels leukocytes in situ, enabling the direct, non-invasive observation of immune system response and localized inflammation. Applications include observing change in immune system response to therapeutics and mapping localized disease such as certain cancers and infections. V-Sense can also be used to detect the partial pressure of oxygen in tissues, a useful biomarker in cancer research and treatment.
- Voxel Tracker: a software product for use with Celsense imaging reagents. The Voxel Tracker software program enables visualization and quantification of MRI-labeled cells. The image processing toolbox fuses and visualizes three-dimensional 1H and 19F images. Computational tools enable cell or inflammation quantification in regions of interest.
Corporate structure
Current members of the board of directors of Celsense are: Charles F. O’Hanlon, III, Thomas Petzinger, Jr., Paul Kornblith, Jeffrey S. Friedman, L. Gerald Tarantino, and Gregory T. Hebrank.[4]
References
- Cell Sense White Paper Archived July 8, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- Fluorine‐containing nanoemulsions for MRI cell tracking
- V-Sense White Paper Archived July 8, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- Celsense, Celsense Board of Directors, accessed 5 Jun 2013
- Celsense, Celsense Board of Directors, accessed 25 Feb 2011
- Celsense, Celsense Board of Directors, accessed 25 Feb 2011
- Celsense, Celsense Management, accessed 25 Feb 2011
External links
- Celsense
- "19F MRI detection of acute allograft rejection with in vivo perfluorocarbon labeling of immune cells". Medical Resonance in Medicine (2011). doi:10.1002/mrm.22702
- "Functional assessment of human dendritic cells labeled for in vivo 19F magnetic resonance imaging cell tracking." Cytotherapy 2010; 2010;12(2):238-250
- "In vivo imaging platform for tracking immunotherapeutic cells." Nat Biotechnol 2005;23(8):983-987
- "Fluorine-containing nanoemulsions for MRI cell tracking." WileyInterdiscip Rev Nanomed Nanobiotechnol. 2009 1(5):492-501
- "Clinical cell therapy imaging using a perfluorocarbon tracer and fluorine-19 MRI." Magn Reson Med. 2014 doi: 10.1002/mrm.25454