| Literature DB >> 30646564 |
Giorgio Ottaviano1,2, Robert Chiesa3, Tobias Feuchtinger4, Mark A Vickers5,6, Anne Dickinson7, Andrew R Gennery8,9, Paul Veys10, Stephen Todryk11,12.
Abstract
Adverse outcomes following virus-associated disease in patients receiving allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) have encouraged strategies to control viral reactivation in immunosuppressed patients. However, despite timely treatment with antiviral medication, some viral infections remain refractory to treatment, which hampers outcomes after HSCT, and are responsible for a high proportion of transplant-related morbidity and mortality. Adoptive transfer of donor-derived lymphocytes aims to improve cellular immunity and to prevent or treat viral diseases after HSCT. Early reports described the feasibility of transferring nonspecific lymphocytes from donors, which led to the development of cell therapy approaches based on virus-specific T cells, allowing a targeted treatment of infections, while limiting adverse events such as graft versus host disease (GvHD). Both expansion and direct selection techniques have yielded comparable results in terms of efficacy (around 70⁻80%), but efficacy is difficult to predict for individual cases. Generating bespoke products for each donor⁻recipient pair can be expensive, and there remains the major obstacle of generating products from seronegative or poorly responsive donors. More recent studies have focused on the feasibility of collecting and infusing partially matched third-party virus-specific T cells, reporting response rates of 60⁻70%. Future development of this approach will involve the broadening of applicability to multiple viruses, the optimization and cost-control of manufacturing, larger multicentred efficacy trials, and finally the creation of cell banks that can provide prompt access to virus-specific cellular product. The aim of this review is to summarise present knowledge on adoptive T cell manufacturing, efficacy and potential future developments.Entities:
Keywords: adoptive cell therapy; haematopoietic stem cell transplantation; third party donor; viral infections
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30646564 PMCID: PMC6356262 DOI: 10.3390/cells8010047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Reported incidence of AdV, CMV and EBV post-transplant reactivation in peripheral blood, and disease-specific pharmacological treatment and rate of treatment response in children and adults undergoing haematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
| Patients | Viremia | Viral Disease | Treatment | Response Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Children | 15–30% | 6–11% | Cidofovir, brincidofovir | 60–80% |
| Adults | 6–15% | 2% | ||
|
| ||||
| Children | 15–20% | 4% | Gancyclovir, foscarnet, valgancyclovir | 70–80% |
| Adults | 39% | 13% | ||
|
| ||||
| Children | 11% | 1–7% | Rituximab | 60–70% |
| Adults | 22% | 1–3% | ||
Largest published clinical trials for treatment and prevention of viral reactivation after HSCT using donor-derived single-virus adaptive therapy, using either ex vivo expansion or direct selection.
| Patients ( | Population | Viral Infection | VST Stimulated or Isolated by | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ex-Vivo Expanded | ||||
| 113 | Adults/Children | EBV | LBC | Heslop, 2010 [ |
| 50 | Adults/Children | CMV | Mo-DC pp65-restricted | Blyth, 2013 [ |
| 8 | Children | ADV | Multi-peptides AdV5 | Ip, 2018 [ |
| Direct Selection | ||||
| 10 | Adults/Children | EBV | IFN-γ capture | Icheva, 2013 [ |
| 18 | Unknown | CMV | IFN-γ capture | Peggs, 2011 [ |
| 30 | Adults/Children | ADV | IFN-γ capture | Feucht, 2015 [ |
Abbreviations: LBC: lymphoblastoid cells; IFN: interferon; Mo-DC: monocyte-derived dendritic cells.
Largest published clinical trials for treatment and prevention of viral reactivation after HSCT using donor-derived multiple-virus adaptive therapy.
| Patients ( | Population | Viral Specificity | VST Stimulated by | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13 | Children | EBV/ADV | LBCs transduced with ADV vector | Leen, 2009 [ |
| 15 | Adults/Children | ADV/CMV/EBV | LBCs transduced with ADV vector encoding CMVpp65 | Leen, 2006 [ |
| 10 | Adults | ADV/CMV/EBV/VZV | Mo-DC transduced with ADV vector encoding CMVpp65, EBNA1, VZV vaccine | Ma, 2015 [ |
| 11 | Adults/Children | ADV/CMV/EBV/BKV/HHV6 | Pepmixes of immunodominant antigens | Papadopulou, 2014 [ |
Abbreviations: LBC: lymphoblastoid cells; Mo-DC: monocyte-derived dendritic cells; VZV: Varicella–Zoster virus; EBNA1: Epstein–Barr nuclear antigen 1.
Figure 1Third-party CTL efficiently cleared viral load in a transplanted child with refractory AdV infection, although significant liver GvHD occurred afterwards. Adapted from Qasim et al. [61].