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CAR T cells with dual targeting of CD19 and CD22 in adult patients with recurrent or refractory B cell malignancies: a phase 1 trial.

Authors :
Spiegel JY
Patel S
Muffly L
Hossain NM
Oak J
Baird JH
Frank MJ
Shiraz P
Sahaf B
Craig J
Iglesias M
Younes S
Natkunam Y
Ozawa MG
Yang E
Tamaresis J
Chinnasamy H
Ehlinger Z
Reynolds W
Lynn R
Rotiroti MC
Gkitsas N
Arai S
Johnston L
Lowsky R
Majzner RG
Meyer E
Negrin RS
Rezvani AR
Sidana S
Shizuru J
Weng WK
Mullins C
Jacob A
Kirsch I
Bazzano M
Zhou J
Mackay S
Bornheimer SJ
Schultz L
Ramakrishna S
Davis KL
Kong KA
Shah NN
Qin H
Fry T
Feldman S
Mackall CL
Miklos DB
Source :
Nature medicine [Nat Med] 2021 Aug; Vol. 27 (8), pp. 1419-1431. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Jul 26.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Despite impressive progress, more than 50% of patients treated with CD19-targeting chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR19) experience progressive disease. Ten of 16 patients with large B cell lymphoma (LBCL) with progressive disease after CAR19 treatment had absent or low CD19. Lower surface CD19 density pretreatment was associated with progressive disease. To prevent relapse with CD19 <superscript>-</superscript> or CD19 <superscript>lo</superscript> disease, we tested a bispecific CAR targeting CD19 and/or CD22 (CD19-22.BB.z-CAR) in a phase I clinical trial ( NCT03233854 ) of adults with relapsed/refractory B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) and LBCL. The primary end points were manufacturing feasibility and safety with a secondary efficacy end point. Primary end points were met; 97% of products met protocol-specified dose and no dose-limiting toxicities occurred during dose escalation. In B-ALL (nā€‰=ā€‰17), 100% of patients responded with 88% minimal residual disease-negative complete remission (CR); in LBCL (nā€‰=ā€‰21), 62% of patients responded with 29% CR. Relapses were CD19 <superscript>-/lo</superscript> in 50% (5 out of 10) of patients with B-ALL and 29% (4 out of 14) of patients with LBCL but were not associated with CD22 <superscript>-/lo</superscript> disease. CD19/22-CAR products demonstrated reduced cytokine production when stimulated with CD22 versus CD19. Our results further implicate antigen loss as a major cause of CAR T cell resistance, highlight the challenge of engineering multi-specific CAR T cells with equivalent potency across targets and identify cytokine production as an important quality indicator for CAR T cell potency.<br /> (© 2021. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1546-170X
Volume :
27
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34312556
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-021-01436-0