Infusion of Cytotoxic T Cells for the Prevention and Treatment of Epstein-Barr Virus–Induced Lymphoma in Allogeneic Transplant Recipients

Author:

Rooney Cliona M.1,Smith Colton A.1,Ng Catherine Y.C.1,Loftin Susan K.1,Sixbey John W.1,Gan Yanjun1,Srivastava Deo-Kumar1,Bowman Laura C.1,Krance Robert A.1,Brenner Malcolm K.1,Heslop Helen E.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Departments of Virology and Molecular Biology, Biostatistics, and the Division of Bone Marrow Transplantation, St Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, TN; and the Departments of Pathology and Pediatrics, University of Tennessee, Memphis, TN.

Abstract

Abstract Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) causes potentially lethal immunoblastic lymphoma in up to 25% of children receiving bone marrow transplants from unrelated or HLA-mismatched donors. Because this complication appears to stem from a deficiency of EBV-specific cytotoxic T cells, we assessed the safety and efficacy of donor-derived polyclonal (CD4+ and CD8+) T-cell lines as immunoprophylaxis and treatment for EBV-related lymphoma. Thirty-nine patients considered to be at high risk for EBV-induced lymphoma each received 2 to 4 intravenous infusions of donor-derived EBV-specific T lymphocytes, after they had received T-cell–depleted bone marrow from HLA-matched unrelated donors (n = 33) or mismatched family members (n = 6). The immunologic effects of this therapy were monitored during and after the infusions. Infused cells were identified by detection of the neo marker gene. EBV-specific T cells bearing theneo marker were identified in all but 1 of the patients. Serial analysis of DNA detected the marker gene for as long as 18 weeks in unmanipulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells and for as long as 38 months in regenerated lines of EBV-specific cytotoxic T cells. Six patients (15.5%) had greatly increased amounts of EBV-DNA on study entry (>2,000 genome copies/106 mononuclear cells), indicating uncontrolled EBV replication, a complication that has had a high correlation with subsequent development of overt lymphoma. All of these patients showed 2 to 4 log decreases in viral DNA levels within 2 to 3 weeks after infusion and none developed lymphoma, confirming the antiviral activity of the donor-derived cells. There were no toxic effects that could be attributed to prophylactic T-cell therapy. Two additional patients who did not receive prophylaxis and developed overt immunoblastic lymphoma responded fully to T-cell infusion. Polyclonal donor-derived T-cell lines specific for EBV proteins can thus be used safely to prevent EBV-related immunoblastic lymphoma after allogeneic marrow transplantation and may also be effective in the treatment of established disease. © 1998 by The American Society of Hematology.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

Reference38 articles.

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