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Peripheral leukemia burden at time of apheresis negatively affects the clinical efficacy of CART19 in refractory or relapsed B-ALL

Authors :
Biping Deng
Jing Pan
Zhaoli Liu
Shuangyou Liu
Yunlong Chen
Xiaomin Qu
Yu'e Zhang
Yuehui Lin
Yanlei Zhang
Xinjian Yu
Zhongxin Zhang
Xuansha Niu
Rong Luan
Ming Ma
Xiaomei Li
Tingting Liu
Xi'ai Wu
Huan Niu
Alex H. Chang
Chunrong Tong
Source :
Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development, Vol 23, Iss , Pp 633-643 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

Our previous clinical study achieved complete remission (CR) rates of >90% following chimeric antigen receptor T cells targeting CD19 (CART19) treatment of refractory/relapsed B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (r/r B-ALL); however, the influence of the leukemia burden in peripheral blood (PB) blasts remains unclear. Here, we retrospectively analyzed 143 patients treated with CART19 (including 36 patients with PB blasts) to evaluate the effect of peripheral leukemia burden at the time of apheresis. One hundred seventeen patients with high disease burdens achieved 91.5% CR or incomplete count recovery CR and 86.3% minimal residual disease-negative CR, and 26 patients with low disease burdens obtained 96.2% MRD− CR. Collectively, 9 of 36 (25%) patients with PB blasts and 2 of 107 (1.87%) patients without PB blasts did not respond to CART19 therapy. The leukemia burden in PB negatively influenced ex vivo cell characteristics, including the transduction efficiency of CD3+ T cells and their fold expansion, and in vivo cell dynamics, including peak CART19 proportion and absolute count, fold expansion, and persistence duration. Further studies showed that these patients had higher programmed death-1 expression in CART19 products. Our data imply that PB blasts negatively affected CART19 production and the clinical efficacy of CART19 therapy in patients with r/r B-ALL.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23290501
Volume :
23
Issue :
633-643
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8a5d1e95aae845aaab269d3ee1c2bab7
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.omtm.2021.10.006