AbstractBackground: Adoptive cell therapies using Chimeric Antigen Receptors (CARs) show durable clinical benefit for patients with hematologic malignancies, however, challenges remain for enabling this personalized treatment to be delivered in a timely, cost effective, and logistically friendly manner.Methods: Lentiviral vectors (LV) encoding CD19 and CD22 CARs with a synthetic driver element were packaged with a VSV-G envelope designed with the capability to target and activate CD3pos T cells in whole blood. LV were directly reconstituted in peripheral whole blood for four hours and total nucleated cells (TNC) or peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were rapidly isolated utilizing two different closed systems. Immediately following the four-hour exposure event, isolated TNC or PBMC were injected subcutaneously into mice with disseminated Raji luciferase tumor cells. For further characterization, LV-exposed TNC and PBMC were cultured in vitro for six days and functionally examined.Results: Following four-hour exposure to CD3-directed LVs, more than 90% of T cells, including naïve/naïve derived (CCR7pos CD45ROneg) and central memory (CCR7pos CD45ROpos) T cells present within isolated TNC or PBMC exhibited a significant decrease in CD3 surface expression. Subcutaneous injection of gene modified TNC or PBMC resulted in the in vivo generation and expansion of large numbers of circulating CAR-T positive cells with complete eradication of disseminated Raji tumors. In parallel cell culture experiments, TNC or PBMC isolated following four-hour LV whole blood exposure exhibited robust expansion without additional T-cell receptor (TCR) or CD3 stimulation, while TNC or PBMC not exposed to virus did not show any expansion. Following six days in culture, immunophenotyping by flow cytometry demonstrated that more than 90% of the cells were CD8pos and CD4pos T cells with CAR-T expression present on central memory (CCR7pos CD45ROpos) and effector memory (CCR7neg CD45ROpos) T cells. CAR-T antigen specificity to CD19 and CD22 was measured by IFN-gamma release co-culture assays.Conclusion: We conclude that large numbers of functionally active CAR-T positive cells can be generated both in vitro and in vivo following a four-hour peripheral whole blood exposure to CD3-directed LVs encoding for CARs with a synthetic driver element. These results provide the basis for an autologous same-day peripheral blood draw to subcutaneous injection rapid point-of-care (rPOC) approach.Citation Format: Dongming Zhang, Frederic Vigant, Qun He, Anirban Kundu, Wei Zhang, Hongliang Zong, Ewa Jaruga-Killeen, Gregory Schreiber, Michelle Andraza, Alissa R. Kerner, Gregory I. Frost, Sid P. Kerkar. Subcutaneous injection of total nucleated cells rapidly isolated following four-hour peripheral whole blood exposure to CD3-directed CAR-T lentiviruses with a synthetic driver results in robust CAR-T proliferation and anti-tumor immunity [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2021; 2021 Apr 10-15 and May 17-21. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(13_Suppl):Abstract nr 1511.