Anti-CD19 CAR T-cell consolidation therapy combined with CD19+ feeding T cells and TKI for Ph+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Author:

Chen Li-Yun12,Gong Wen-Jie12,Li Ming-Hao3ORCID,Zhou Hai-Xia12,Xu Ming-Zhu12,Qian Chong-Sheng12,Kang Li-Qing3,Xu Nan3ORCID,Yu Zhou3,Qiao Man12,Zhang Tong-Tong12,Zhang Ling12,Tian Zheng-Long4,Sun Ai-Ning12,Yu Lei35,Wu De-Pei12,Xue Sheng-Li12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1National Clinical Research Center for Hematologic Diseases, Jiangsu Institute of Hematology, The First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University, Suzhou, China

2. 2Institute of Blood and Marrow Transplantation, Collaborative Innovation Center of Hematology, Soochow University, Suzhou, China

3. 3Shanghai Unicar-Therapy Bio-Medicine Technology Co, Ltd, Shanghai, China

4. 4Gobroad Research Center, Gobroad Medical Group, Bejing, China

5. 5Institute of Biomedical Engineering and Technology, Shanghai Engineering Research Center of Molecular Therapeutics and New Drug Development, School of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, East China Normal University, Shanghai, China

Abstract

Abstract We conducted a single-arm, open-label, single-center phase 1 study to assess the safety and efficacy of multicycle-sequential anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy in combination with autologous CD19+ feeding T cells (FTCs) and tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) as consolidation therapy in patients under the age of 65 years with de novo Ph-positive CD19+ B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Participants were given induction chemotherapy as well as systemic chemotherapy with TKI. Afterward, they received a single cycle of CD19 CAR T-cell infusion and another 3 cycles of CD19 CAR T-cell and CD19+ FTC infusions, followed by TKI as consolidation therapy. CD19+ FTCs were given at 3 different doses. The phase 1 results of the first 15 patients, including 2 withdrawals, are presented. The most common adverse events were cytopenia (13/13) and hypogammaglobinemia (12/13). There was no incidence of cytokine release syndrome above grade 2 or immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome or grade 4 nonhematological toxicities. All 13 patients achieved complete remission, including 12 patients with a complete molecular response (CMR) at the data cutoff. The relapse-free survival was 84%, and the overall survival was 83% with a median follow-up of 27 months. The total number of CD19-expressing cells decreased with an increasing CMR rate. CD19 CAR T cells survived for up to 40 months, whereas CD19+ FTCs vanished in 8 patients 3 months after the last infusion. These findings could form the basis for the development of an allo-HSCT–free consolidation paradigm. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT03984968.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Hematology

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