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Antibodies against vaccine-preventable infections after CAR-T cell therapy for B cell malignancies

Authors :
Alexandre V. Hirayama
Damian J. Green
Terry Stevens-Ayers
Joshua A. Hill
Andrew J. Cowan
Justin J. Taylor
Joyce Maalouf
Laurel Joncas-Schronce
Carla S Walti
Jacob Keane-Candib
Elizabeth M Krantz
Jim Boonyaratanakornkit
Michael Boeckh
Rebecca Gardner
Merav Bar
Cameron J. Turtle
David G. Maloney
Sayan Dasgupta
Source :
JCI Insight
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Little is known about pathogen-specific humoral immunity after chimeric antigen receptor–modified T (CAR-T) cell therapy for B cell malignancies. METHODS We conducted a prospective cross-sectional study of CD19-targeted or B cell maturation antigen–targeted (BCMA-targeted) CAR-T cell therapy recipients at least 6 months posttreatment and in remission. We measured pathogen-specific IgG against 12 vaccine-preventable infections and the number of viral and bacterial epitopes to which IgG was detected (“epitope hits”) using a serological profiling assay. The primary outcome was the proportion of participants with IgG levels above a threshold correlated with seroprotection for vaccine-preventable infections. RESULTS We enrolled 65 children and adults a median of 20 months after CD19- (n = 54) or BCMA- (n = 11) CAR-T cell therapy. Among 30 adults without IgG replacement therapy (IGRT) in the prior 16 weeks, 27 (90%) had hypogammaglobulinemia. These individuals had seroprotection to a median of 67% (IQR, 59%–73%) of tested infections. Proportions of participants with seroprotection per pathogen were comparable to population-based studies, but most individuals lacked seroprotection to specific pathogens. Compared with CD19-CAR-T cell recipients, BCMA-CAR-T cell recipients were half as likely to have seroprotection (prevalence ratio, 0.47; 95% CI, 0.18–1.25) and had fewer pathogen-specific epitope hits (mean difference, –90 epitope hits; 95% CI, –157 to –22). CONCLUSION Seroprotection for vaccine-preventable infections in adult CD19-CAR-T cell recipients was comparable to the general population. BCMA-CAR-T cell recipients had fewer pathogen-specific antibodies. Deficits in both groups support the need for vaccine and immunoglobulin replacement therapy studies. FUNDING Swiss National Science Foundation (Early Postdoc Mobility grant P2BSP3_188162), NIH/National Cancer Institute (NIH/NCI) (U01CA247548 and P01CA018029), NIH/NCI Cancer Center Support Grants (P30CA0087-48 and P30CA015704-44), American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy, and Juno Therapeutics/BMS.<br />In this prospective study, we investigated antibodies against vaccine-preventable infections and other pathogen-specific antibodies in individuals with remission after CAR-T cell therapy for B lineage malignancies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23793708
Volume :
6
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JCI Insight
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ed991400a6e26886170f0e109ac3678c