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Flow Cytometry in Clinical Trials: A Multi-Parametric Approach

May 24, 2026

What Flow Cytometry Offers That Other Techniques Cannot

Flow cytometry measures multiple physical and chemical characteristics of individual cells as they pass, one by one, through a laser beam. Each cell scatters light in a pattern determined by its size and internal complexity, and emits fluorescence from labelled antibodies or other probes bound to specific markers on its surface or inside the cell. A modern flow cytometer can measure ten, fifteen, or more parameters simultaneously on each cell, generating a dataset that describes the phenotype and functional state of thousands of individual cells in a single sample.

For clinical trials that involve the immune system, this single-cell resolution is what makes flow cytometry irreplaceable. Bulk methods such as ELISA or gene expression arrays describe the average behaviour of a cell population. Flow cytometry resolves that population into its constituent subsets, revealing changes in the relative proportions of T cell subsets, NK cell activation states, or myeloid cell phenotypes that would be invisible in aggregate data.

Clinical Applications of Flow Cytometry

Immunophenotyping for Immunotherapy Trials

Immune checkpoint inhibitors, CAR-T cell therapies, bispecific antibodies, and other immunotherapy modalities all act by modifying the immune system. Understanding how they change the composition and activation state of immune cell populations in peripheral blood or tumour tissue is essential for interpreting clinical responses and adverse events. Flow cytometry panels for immunotherapy trials typically characterise T cell subsets including CD4, CD8, regulatory T cells, and exhaustion markers, as well as NK cells and myeloid populations.

Pharmacodynamic Monitoring

Flow cytometry is widely used to measure the pharmacodynamic effects of biologic drugs that target immune cell populations. For a drug targeting CD20-positive B cells, flow cytometry provides direct evidence of B cell depletion in peripheral blood. For a drug intended to expand a specific T cell population, multi-parametric immunophenotyping demonstrates the intended pharmacological effect and supports dose selection.

Minimal Residual Disease (MRD) Assessment

In haematological malignancies including leukaemia and multiple myeloma, flow cytometry is used to detect residual tumour cells at levels below the threshold of morphological assessment. Multi-parametric MRD panels using eight or more markers can detect one tumour cell in ten thousand or more normal cells, providing a sensitive endpoint for assessing depth of response to treatment.

Building a Validated Multi-Parametric Panel

Development StepPurposeKey Considerations
Panel designSelect fluorochrome-antibody combinations that minimise spectral overlap and maximise signal resolutionUse brightest fluorochromes for low-density targets; apply compensation controls for every fluorochrome in the panel
Titration optimisationDetermine optimal antibody concentration for each reagentUnder-titration loses signal; over-titration increases background; titrate in the intended matrix
Specificity testingConfirm each antibody detects the intended targetUse positive and negative control cell populations with known phenotype
Sensitivity / LLOQDetermine the lowest detectable frequency of positive cellsCritical for rare cell populations and MRD applications
Inter-operator and inter-instrument precisionDemonstrate reproducibility across analysts and instrumentsUse standardised bead-based calibration; include reference samples across runs
Fit-for-purpose validationDemonstrate panel performance meets requirements for intended useScope determined by data criticality; follow EuroFlow or ISAC guidelines as appropriate

Practical Considerations for Clinical Sample Handling

Flow cytometry results are sensitive to pre-analytical variables including time from blood collection to processing, storage temperature, and the use of anticoagulants. Whole blood samples for immunophenotyping are typically processed within four to six hours of collection, using lyse-no-wash protocols that minimise cell activation and loss. For clinical trials where samples are collected at remote sites and shipped to a central laboratory, the pre-analytical handling conditions must be validated to demonstrate that the analytical results are not affected by the transport time and conditions.

Ardena’s clinical team at Assen works with clinical operations teams to design sample handling procedures that are practical for site staff while ensuring data quality at the central laboratory. Stability data supporting the validated shipping conditions is documented and available for regulatory review.

Ardena’s Flow Cytometry Capabilities

Ardena’s flow cytometry laboratory in Assen operates multi-laser instruments capable of panels up to fifteen or more parameters, with dedicated capacity for clinical trial sample analysis. The team develops and validates multi-parametric immunophenotyping panels, MRD panels, and functional assays including intracellular cytokine staining and proliferation assays.

Flow cytometry services at Ardena are integrated with the wider bioanalytical platform, allowing immune cell data to be interpreted alongside PK, PD, and immunogenicity data from the same study, providing the multi-dimensional dataset that characterises the immune pharmacology of complex therapeutics.

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