| Literature DB >> 26813675 |
Joseph A Fraietta1, Kyle A Beckwith2, Prachi R Patel1, Marco Ruella1, Zhaohui Zheng1, David M Barrett3, Simon F Lacey1, Jan Joseph Melenhorst1, Shannon E McGettigan1, Danielle R Cook1, Changfeng Zhang1, Jun Xu1, Priscilla Do2, Jessica Hulitt3, Sagar B Kudchodkar1, Alexandria P Cogdill1, Saar Gill4, David L Porter5, Jennifer A Woyach2, Meixiao Long2, Amy J Johnson2, Kami Maddocks2, Natarajan Muthusamy2, Bruce L Levine6, Carl H June6, John C Byrd2, Marcela V Maus7.
Abstract
Anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy is highly promising but requires robust T-cell expansion and engraftment. A T-cell defect in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) due to disease and/or therapy impairs ex vivo expansion and response to CAR T cells. To evaluate the effect of ibrutinib treatment on the T-cell compartment in CLL as it relates to CAR T-cell generation, we examined the phenotype and function of T cells in a cohort of CLL patients during their course of treatment with ibrutinib. We found that ≥5 cycles of ibrutinib therapy improved the expansion of CD19-directed CAR T cells (CTL019), in association with decreased expression of the immunosuppressive molecule programmed cell death 1 on T cells and of CD200 on B-CLL cells. In support of these findings, we observed that 3 CLL patients who had been treated with ibrutinib for ≥1 year at the time of T-cell collection had improved ex vivo and in vivo CTL019 expansion, which correlated positively together and with clinical response. Lastly, we show that ibrutinib exposure does not impair CAR T-cell function in vitro but does improve CAR T-cell engraftment, tumor clearance, and survival in human xenograft models of resistant acute lymphocytic leukemia and CLL when administered concurrently. Our collective findings indicate that ibrutinib enhances CAR T-cell function and suggest that clinical trials with combination therapy are warranted. Our studies demonstrate that improved T-cell function may also contribute to the efficacy of ibrutinib in CLL. These trials were registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01747486, #NCT01105247, and #NCT01217749.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26813675 PMCID: PMC4778162 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2015-11-679134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113