| Literature DB >> 31235963 |
Aude G Chapuis1,2,3, Daniel N Egan2,3, Merav Bar2,3, Thomas M Schmitt1,2, Megan S McAfee1,2, Kelly G Paulson1,2,3, Valentin Voillet4, Raphael Gottardo4,5, Gunnar B Ragnarsson1,2,6, Marie Bleakley1,2,3, Cecilia C Yeung2,3, Petri Muhlhauser3, Hieu N Nguyen1,7, Lara A Kropp1,2,8, Luca Castelli1,2,8, Felecia Wagener1,2, Daniel Hunter1,2, Marcus Lindberg1,2,9, Kristen Cohen4, Aaron Seese4, M Juliana McElrath2,3,4, Natalie Duerkopp1,2, Ted A Gooley2,5, Philip D Greenberg10,11,12,13.
Abstract
Relapse after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is the leading cause of death in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) entering HCT with poor-risk features1-3. When HCT does produce prolonged relapse-free survival, it commonly reflects graft-versus-leukemia effects mediated by donor T cells reactive with antigens on leukemic cells4. As graft T cells have not been selected for leukemia specificity and frequently recognize proteins expressed by many normal host tissues, graft-versus-leukemia effects are often accompanied by morbidity and mortality from graft-versus-host disease5. Thus, AML relapse risk might be more effectively reduced with T cells expressing receptors (TCRs) that target selected AML antigens6. We therefore isolated a high-affinity Wilms' Tumor Antigen 1-specific TCR (TCRC4) from HLA-A2+ normal donor repertoires, inserted TCRC4 into Epstein-Bar virus-specific donor CD8+ T cells (TTCR-C4) to minimize graft-versus-host disease risk and enhance transferred T cell survival7,8, and infused these cells prophylactically post-HCT into 12 patients ( NCT01640301 ). Relapse-free survival was 100% at a median of 44 months following infusion, while a concurrent comparative group of 88 patients with similar risk AML had 54% relapse-free survival (P = 0.002). TTCR-C4 maintained TCRC4 expression, persisted long-term and were polyfunctional. This strategy appears promising for preventing AML recurrence in individuals at increased risk of post-HCT relapse.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31235963 PMCID: PMC6982533 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-019-0472-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440