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Cytokine Release Syndrome and Tumor Responses in a First-in-Man Trial of a Novel Affinity-Enhanced TCR-Gene Transduced T Cell Transfer Targeting NY-ESO-1 Antigen

Authors :
Hidefumi Kato
Takashi Kojima
Hiroshi Shiku
Shinichi Kageyama
Naoki Inoue
Mikiya Ishihara
Hideto Chono
Junichi Mineno
Yoshihiro Miyahara
Daisuke Tomura
Ikuei Nukaya
Sachiko Okamoto
Tomohide Kidokoro
Shigehisa Kitano
Hiroaki Ikeda
Takeru Funakoshi
Noboru Yamamoto
Hiroaki Iwase
Takashi Watanabe
Hideyuki Mishima
Hiroyoshi Hattori
Source :
Blood. 130:841-841
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2017.

Abstract

Adoptive cell transfers of receptor gene-engineered T cells include chimeric antigen receptor-gene transduced T (CAR-T) cell therapy and TCR-gene transduced T (TCR-T) cell therapy. In CD19-CAR-T cell therapy, high incidence of cytokine release syndrome (CRS) is associated with in vivo CAR-T cell proliferation and its clinical efficacy. In human TCR-T cell therapies, there have not been well known about CRS and its association with in vivo T cell kinetics or tumor responses. We have been developing a novel-type affinity-enhanced NY-ESO-1-specific TCR, and an original retrovirus vector that encodes siRNA to silence endogenous TCR creation. The NY-ESO-1 TCR is mutated for high affinity with replacements of G50A and A51E in CDR2 region, which is restricted with HLA-A*02:01 and A*02:06. We extensively examined potential cross-reactivities to different antigen-peptides in preclinical studies, and the high-affinity NY-ESO-1 TCR did not recognize analogous peptides. The new generation retroviral TCR-vector provides enhanced expression of transduced tumor-specific TCRs and an inhibition effect of formations of self-reactive TCRs. This is a first-in-man clinical trial of the novel NY-ESO-1-specfic TCR-T cell transfer to evaluate the safety, in vivo cell kinetics and clinical responses. It is designed as a cell-dose escalation from 5 x108 to 5 x109 cells. NY-ESO-1-expressing refractory cancer patients were enrolled, with 3+3 cohort design. Cyclophosphamide with/without fludarabine were administered prior to the TCR-T cell transfer as pre-conditioning. Six patients were treated with the NY-ESO-1 TCR-T cell transfer, and evaluated for the safety and in vivo cell kinetics. The TCR-T cells appeared in peripheral blood with a dose-dependent manner, associated with in vivo proliferation in an early phase. In three patients given 5x108 cells, no toxicities were seen. Two patients receiving 5x109 cells developed early-phase CRS (G2), with elevations of serum IL-6 and IFN-gamma. They were managed the treatment of anti-IL-6 receptor monoclonal antibody, tocilizumab. In a patient who developed CRS, an event of lung injury (G3) occurred, which was associated with marked infiltration of the NY-ESO-1 TCR-T cells. It was successfully treated with steroid. Two synovial sarcoma patients exhibited tumor responses of PRs. In one patient, progression-free survival lasted more than 8 months. In summary, the affinity-enhanced NY-ESO-1 TCR-T cell transfer exhibited CRSs in association with in vivo cell proliferation and sequential tumor responses. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
130
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e9b84fe40da29b73a65eb49892cc1053
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v130.suppl_1.841.841