Back to Search Start Over

CD19/CD20 Bispecific Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) in Naïve/Memory T Cells for the Treatment of Relapsed or Refractory Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma

Authors :
Sarah M. Larson
Christopher M. Walthers
Brenda Ji
Sanaz N. Ghafouri
Jacob Naparstek
Jacqueline Trent
Jia Ming Chen
Mobina Roshandell
Caitlin Harris
Mobina Khericha
Thomas Schweppe
Beata Berent-Maoz
Stanley B. Gosliner
Amr Almaktari
Melanie Ayala Ceja
Martin S. Allen-Auerbach
Jonathan Said
Karla Nawaly
Monica Mead
Sven de Vos
Patricia A. Young
Caspian Oliai
Gary J. Schiller
John M. Timmerman
Antoni Ribas
Yvonne Y. Chen
Source :
Cancer discovery.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

To address antigen escape and loss of T-cell functionality, we report a phase I clinical trial (NCT04007029) evaluating autologous naive and memory T (TN/MEM) cells engineered to express a bispecific anti-CD19/CD20 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR; CART19/20) for patients with relapsed/refractory non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), with safety as the primary endpoint. Ten patients were treated with 36 × 106 to 165 × 106 CART19/20 cells. No patient experienced neurotoxicity of any grade or over grade 1 cytokine release syndrome. One case of dose-limiting toxicity (persistent cytopenia) was observed. Nine of 10 patients achieved objective response [90% overall response rate (ORR)], with seven achieving complete remission [70% complete responses (CR) rate]. One patient relapsed after 18 months in CR but returned to CR after receiving a second dose of CART19/20 cells. Median progression-free survival was 18 months and median overall survival was not reached with a 17-month median follow-up. In conclusion, CART19/20 TN/MEM cells are safe and effective in patients with relapsed/refractory NHL, with durable responses achieved at low dosage levels.Significance:Autologous CD19/CD20 bispecific CAR-T cell therapy generated from TN/MEM cells for patients with NHL is safe (no neurotoxicity, maximum grade 1 cytokine release syndrome) and demonstrates strong efficacy (90% ORR, 70% CR rate) in a first-in-human, phase I dose-escalation trial.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 517

Subjects

Subjects :
Oncology

Details

ISSN :
21598290
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer discovery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....167a18da8ab9ceb6fa875422b5dc430d