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Intravenous and intracranial GD2-CAR T cells for H3K27M+diffuse midline gliomas

Authors :
Monje, Michelle
Mahdi, Jasia
Majzner, Robbie
Yeom, Kristen W.
Schultz, Liora M.
Richards, Rebecca M.
Barsan, Valentin
Song, Kun-Wei
Kamens, Jen
Baggott, Christina
Kunicki, Michael
Rietberg, Skyler P.
Lim, Alexandria Sung
Reschke, Agnes
Mavroukakis, Sharon
Egeler, Emily
Moon, Jennifer
Patel, Shabnum
Chinnasamy, Harshini
Erickson, Courtney
Jacobs, Ashley
Duh, Allison K.
Tunuguntla, Ramya
Klysz, Dorota Danuta
Fowler, Carley
Green, Sean
Beebe, Barbara
Carr, Casey
Fujimoto, Michelle
Brown, Annie Kathleen
Petersen, Ann-Louise G.
McIntyre, Catherine
Siddiqui, Aman
Lepori-Bui, Nadia
Villar, Katlin
Pham, Kymhuynh
Bove, Rachel
Musa, Eric
Reynolds, Warren D.
Kuo, Adam
Prabhu, Snehit
Rasmussen, Lindsey
Cornell, Timothy T.
Partap, Sonia
Fisher, Paul G.
Campen, Cynthia J.
Grant, Gerald
Prolo, Laura
Ye, Xiaobu
Sahaf, Bita
Davis, Kara L.
Feldman, Steven A.
Ramakrishna, Sneha
Mackall, Crystal
Source :
Nature; 20250101, Issue: Preprints p1-8, 8p
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

H3K27M-mutant diffuse midline gliomas (DMGs) express high levels of the disialoganglioside GD2 (ref. 1). Chimeric antigen receptor-modified T cells targeting GD2 (GD2-CART) eradicated DMGs in preclinical models1. Arm A of Phase I trial no. NCT04196413(ref. 2) administered one intravenous (IV) dose of autologous GD2-CART to patients with H3K27M-mutant pontine (DIPG) or spinal DMG (sDMG) at two dose levels (DL1, 1 × 106kg−1; DL2, 3 × 106kg−1) following lymphodepleting chemotherapy. Patients with clinical or imaging benefit were eligible for subsequent intracerebroventricular (ICV) intracranial infusions (10–30 × 106GD2-CART). Primary objectives were manufacturing feasibility, tolerability and the identification of maximally tolerated IV dose. Secondary objectives included preliminary assessments of benefit. Thirteen patients enroled, with 11 receiving IV GD2-CART on study (n= 3 DL1 (3 DIPG); n= 8 DL2 (6 DIPG, 2 sDMG)). GD2-CART manufacture was successful for all patients. No dose-limiting toxicities occurred on DL1, but three patients experienced dose-limiting cytokine release syndrome on DL2, establishing DL1 as the maximally tolerated IV dose. Nine patients received ICV infusions, with no dose-limiting toxicities. All patients exhibited tumour inflammation-associated neurotoxicity, safely managed with intensive monitoring and care. Four patients demonstrated major volumetric tumour reductions (52, 54, 91 and 100%), with a further three patients exhibiting smaller reductions. One patient exhibited a complete response ongoing for over 30 months since enrolment. Nine patients demonstrated neurological benefit, as measured by a protocol-directed clinical improvement score. Sequential IV, followed by ICV GD2-CART, induced tumour regressions and neurological improvements in patients with DIPG and those with sDMG.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Issue :
Preprints
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs67988556
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08171-9