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Anti-BCMA/CD19 CAR T Cells with Early Immunomodulatory Maintenance for Multiple Myeloma Responding to Initial or Later-Line Therapy

Authors :
Alfred L. Garfall
Adam D. Cohen
Sandra P. Susanibar-Adaniya
Wei-Ting Hwang
Dan T. Vogl
Adam J. Waxman
Simon F. Lacey
Vanessa E. Gonzalez
Joseph A. Fraietta
Minnal Gupta
Irina Kulikovskaya
Lifeng Tian
Fang Chen
Natalka Koterba
Robert L. Bartoszek
Margaret Patchin
Rong Xu
Gabriela Plesa
Don L. Siegel
Andrea Brennan
Anne Marie Nelson
Regina Ferthio
Angela Cosey
Kim-Marie Shea
Rachel Leskowitz
Megan Four
Wesley V. Wilson
Fei Miao
Eric Lancaster
Beatriz M. Carreno
Gerald P. Linette
Elizabeth O. Hexner
Regina M. Young
Dexiu Bu
Keith G. Mansfield
Jennifer L. Brogdon
Carl H. June
Michael C. Milone
Edward A. Stadtmauer
Source :
Blood Cancer Discovery. 4:118-133
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2022.

Abstract

We conducted a phase I clinical trial of anti-BCMA chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CART-BCMA) with or without anti-CD19 CAR T cells (huCART19) in multiple myeloma (MM) patients responding to third- or later-line therapy (phase A, N = 10) or high-risk patients responding to first-line therapy (phase B, N = 20), followed by early lenalidomide or pomalidomide maintenance. We observed no high-grade cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and only one instance of low-grade neurologic toxicity. Among 15 subjects with measurable disease, 10 exhibited partial response (PR) or better; among 26 subjects responding to prior therapy, 9 improved their response category and 4 converted to minimal residual disease (MRD)–negative complete response/stringent complete response. Early maintenance therapy was safe, feasible, and coincided in some patients with CAR T-cell reexpansion and late-onset, durable clinical response. Outcomes with CART-BCMA + huCART19 were similar to CART-BCMA alone. Collectively, our results demonstrate favorable safety, pharmacokinetics, and antimyeloma activity of dual-target CAR T-cell therapy in early lines of MM treatment.Significance:CAR T cells in early lines of MM therapy could be safer and more effective than in the advanced setting, where prior studies have focused. We evaluated the safety, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy of CAR T cells in patients with low disease burden, responding to current therapy, combined with standard maintenance therapy.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 101

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine

Details

ISSN :
26433249 and 26433230
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood Cancer Discovery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....af15a4e58dc3d2eade0573800002170e