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Determinants of response and resistance to CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy of chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Authors :
Lifeng Tian
Joseph A. Fraietta
Jun Xu
Hans Bitter
Carl H. June
Iulian Pruteanu-Malinici
Edward Pequignot
Alina C. Boesteanu
Roddy S. O’Connor
Changfeng Zhang
Noelle V. Frey
Corin L. Dorfmeier
F. Brad Johnson
Simon F. Lacey
Nicholas Wilcox
Bruce L. Levine
Sadik H. Kassim
Stefan Lundh
Harit Parakandi
E. John Wherry
Megan M. Davis
J. Joseph Melenhorst
Regina M. Young
David L. Porter
Wei-Ting Hwang
Yan Wang
Felipe Bedoya
Alexander C. Huang
David E Ambrose
Li Liu
Mercy Gohil
Jennifer Brogdon
Elena Orlando
Don L. Siegel
Fang Chen
Irina Kulikovskaya
Minnal Gupta
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Tolerance to self-antigens prevents the elimination of cancer by the immune system1,2. We used synthetic chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) to overcome immunological tolerance and mediate tumor rejection in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Remission was induced in a subset of subjects, but most did not respond. Comprehensive assessment of patient-derived CAR T cells to identify mechanisms of therapeutic success and failure has not been explored. We performed genomic, phenotypic and functional evaluations to identify determinants of response. Transcriptomic profiling revealed that CAR T cells from complete-responding patients with CLL were enriched in memory-related genes, including IL-6/STAT3 signatures, whereas T cells from nonresponders upregulated programs involved in effector differentiation, glycolysis, exhaustion and apoptosis. Sustained remission was associated with an elevated frequency of CD27+CD45RO–CD8+ T cells before CAR T cell generation, and these lymphocytes possessed memory-like characteristics. Highly functional CAR T cells from patients produced STAT3-related cytokines, and serum IL-6 correlated with CAR T cell expansion. IL-6/STAT3 blockade diminished CAR T cell proliferation. Furthermore, a mechanistically relevant population of CD27+PD-1–CD8+ CAR T cells expressing high levels of the IL-6 receptor predicts therapeutic response and is responsible for tumor control. These findings uncover new features of CAR T cell biology and underscore the potential of using pretreatment biomarkers of response to advance immunotherapies. An IL-6/STAT3 signature and memory CD8 T cell subset in preinfusion chimeric antigen receptor–expressing T cells associate with response in patients with high-risk chronic lymphocytic leukemia.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eab21abca5e0308fecf5fa6ee68f9d55