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Abstract 4701: NY-ESO T cells administered post ASCT for MM exhibit extended functionality without exhaustion in a natural pattern of effector and memory programming

Authors :
Ashraf Badros
Alan D. Bennett
Eduardo Davila
Tom Holdich
Sandra Wesphal
Nancy M. Hardy
Marylène Fortin
Bent K. Jakobsen
Aaron P. Rapoport
Nick Pumphrey
Brendan M. Weiss
Helen K. Tayton-Martin
Carl H. June
Gwendolyn Binder-Scholl
Ryan Wong
Jeffrey Finkelstein
Bruce L. Levine
Naseem Kerr
Edward A. Stadtmauer
Sunita Philip
Sarah Bond
Andrew B. Gerry
Michael Kalos
Yoav Peretz
Saul Yanovich
Luca Melchiori
Lilliam Ribeiro
Joanna E. Brewer
Dan T. Vogl
Simon F. Lacey
Jean A. Yared
Source :
Cancer Research. 75:4701-4701
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2015.

Abstract

Proceedings: AACR 106th Annual Meeting 2015; April 18-22, 2015; Philadelphia, PA Adoptive immunotherapy for cancer has been limited by a lack of antigen specificity, low levels of target expression, and failure to break self-tolerance. We hypothesized that infusion of genetically modified tumor-specific T cells following autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT) may overcome these barriers for multiple myeloma (MM). To test this, we conducted a phase I/II clinical trial ([NCT01352286][1]) in which T cells engineered with an HLA-A*0201 restricted, affinity-enhanced TCR recognizing NY-ESO-1 / LAGE-1 peptides (NY-ESOc259-T), were infused in the setting of profound lymphodepletion that accompanies high-dose chemotherapy given with ASCT. HLA-A*0201 MM patients eligible for ASCT, with antigen positive tumor were enrolled. NY-ESOc259-T was manufactured in a 10 day process using anti-CD3/CD28 microbeads and lentiviral vector, and was administered two days following ASCT. IMWG criteria were used to assess response at day 100 with the addition of a near complete response category (nCR) due to the common occurrence of oligoclonal banding observed following rapid post-ASCT immune reconstitution. Blood and marrow samples were taken at multiple timepoints for serum cytokine analysis, NY-ESOc259-T persistence and trafficking, multiparameter flow analysis to examine the phenotype and function of NY-ESOc259-T, and tumor biomarker analysis. 25 of 29 enrolled patients were infused. A mean of 2.8 × 109 engineered cells were administered (range 8.3 × 108-4.2 × 109), and the average transduction efficiency was 33% (range 30%-45%). Patients tended to have advanced disease (64% chromosomal abnormalities, and 24% prior ASCT). At 3 months, 67% (16/24) and 58% (14/24) of patients were in VGPR and nCR or better, respectively. Infusions were well-tolerated and no cytokine release syndrome was reported. NY-ESOc259-T persisted at 6 months in all but one patient, and in a subset of patients at 2 years; marrow infiltration was consistently observed from day 7 through day 180. NY-ESOc259-T initially displayed a dominant activated effector phenotype which converted towards a dominant effector memory phenotype by 1 year post infusion, in a pattern that mirrored clinical responses. Persisting cells demonstrated a polyfunctional response (IFN-γ and TNF-α) with a cytotoxic (CD107a and granzyme B) signature without overexpression of exhaustion markers (PD-1, LAG-3, and TIM-3). Tumor biomarker analysis is ongoing. MM relapse occurred in 13/25 patients. This data show that NY-ESOc259-T cells exhibit robust trafficking and expansion, durable persistence without exhaustion, and follow a natural immune expansion and contraction pattern consistent with an antigen-driven mechanism of action. Relapse correlated with a loss of persistence or tumor antigen escape, suggesting that targeting multiple antigens and maintenance infusions may increase durable remissions. Citation Format: Aaron Rapoport, Edward Stadtmauer, Luca Melchiori, Ryan Wong, Eduardo Davila, Gwendolyn Binder-Scholl, Tom Holdich, Dan Vogl, Brendan Weiss, Jeffrey Finkelstein, Simon Lacey, Sarah Bond, Marylene Fortin, Yoav Peretz, Joanna Brewer, Alan Bennett, Andrew Gerry, Nick Pumphrey, Helen Tayton-Martin, Lilliam Ribeiro, Ashraf Badros, Saul Yanovich, Nancy Hardy, Jean Yared, Naseem Kerr, Sunita Philip, Sandra Wesphal, Bruce L. Levine, Carl June, Michael Kalos, Bent Jakobsen. NY-ESO T cells administered post ASCT for MM exhibit extended functionality without exhaustion in a natural pattern of effector and memory programming. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 106th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2015 Apr 18-22; Philadelphia, PA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2015;75(15 Suppl):Abstract nr 4701. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2015-4701 [1]: /lookup/external-ref?link_type=CLINTRIALGOV&access_num=NCT01352286&atom=%2Fcanres%2F75%2F15_Supplement%2F4701.atom

Details

ISSN :
15387445 and 00085472
Volume :
75
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c1879583d35613d1e73cfb4ee421ee42