| Literature DB >> 31447852 |
Ping Zhang1, Siok-Keen Tey1,2,3.
Abstract
Delayed immune reconstitution and the consequently high rates of leukemia relapse and infectious complications are the main limitations of haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Donor T cell addback can accelerate immune reconstitution but the therapeutic window between graft-vs.-host disease and protective immunity is very narrow in the haploidentical transplant setting. Hence, strategies to improve the safety and efficacy of adoptive T cell transfer are particularly relevant in this setting. Adoptive T cell transfer strategies in haploidentical transplantation include the use of antigen-specific T cells, allodepletion and alloanergy induction, immune modulation by the co-infusion of regulatory cell populations, and the use of safety switch gene-modified T cells. Whilst common principles apply, there are features that are unique to haploidentical transplantation, where HLA-mismatching directly impacts on immune reconstitution, and shared vs. non-shared HLA-allele can be an important consideration in antigen-specific T cell therapy. This review will also present an update on safety switch gene-modified T cells, which can be conditionally deleted in the event of severe graft- vs.-host disease or other adverse events. Herpes Virus Simplex Thymidine Kinase (HSVtk) and inducible caspase-9 (iCasp9) are safety switches that have undergone multicenter studies in haploidentical transplantation with encouraging results. These gene-modified cells, which are trackable long-term, have also provided important insights on the fate of adoptively transferred T cells. In this review, we will discuss the biology of post-transplant T cell immune reconstitution and the impact of HLA-mismatching, and the different cellular therapy strategies that can help accelerate T cell immune reconstitution after haploidentical transplantation.Entities:
Keywords: T cell immune reconstitution; adoptive T cell therapy; antigen-specific T cells; gene modification; haploidentical transplant; safety switch
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31447852 PMCID: PMC6691120 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Selected studies using G-CSF primed peripheral blood mononuclear cell (G-PBMC) add-back following haploidentical HSCT.
| AML, ALL, CML, MDS, NHL | CD34+ selected stem cell graft, with ATG and pre-transplant CSA and steroids. No post-transplant immunosuppression. | Adults ( | 3 × 104/kg ( | None | aGVHD in 2/2 at 3 × 104/kg; aGVHD grade I not requiring systemic treatment at 1 × 104/kg/month but high relapse rate; GVHD in all patients with dose-escalated DLI or therapeutic DLI. CD4 count ≥ 100 /μL at 6–14 months. | Lewalle et al. ( |
| AML, ALL, and CML | Unmanipulated graft, | Children ( | 0.07–4.4 × 108/kg (median 0.58 × 108/kg); Administered after leukemia relapse; ≥2 doses in five patients | 12 patients received CSA or low-dose MTX for 2–4 weeks | aGVHD III-IV in 6/20 patients; 15 patients achieved CR at a median of 289 days after DLI; 2 year DFS: 40% | Huang et al. ( |
| High-risk leukemia/lymphoma | Unmanipulated graft, | Adults ( | 0.4–6.9 × 107/kg (median 1.8 × 107/kg); 45–240 (median 77) days after HSCT (prophylactic) | CSA | aGVHD II-IV in 55% and aGVHD III-IV in 10% at 100 days after DLI; severe cGVHD in 18%. TRM 26% and relapse rate 33% at 2 years after DLI | Gao et al. ( |
| Malignant and non-malignant diseases | CD34+ selected stem cell graft without post-transplant immunosuppression | Children ( | 3–5 × 104/kg; 30–42 days after HSCT (prophylactic); Rituximab given 1 day before DLI in the last 10 patients | MTX | DLI dose of 5 × 104/kg resulted in CD4 count > 100/μL by 120 days in 67% of patients and aGVHD II-IV in 11%; Fatal viral and fungal infections in 11%; 2 year OS: 69% for patients in remission at transplant. | Gilman et al. ( |
aGVHD, acute graft- vs.-host disease; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; CML, chronic myeloid leukemia; CSA, cyclosporine; DFS, disease-free survival; MDS, myelodysplastic syndrome; MTX, methotrexate; NHL, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma; TRM, treatment-related mortality; OS, overall survival.
Figure 1Strategies for adoptive T cell transfer.
Selected studies using virus-specific T cells that enrolled predominantly haploidentical HSCT patients.
| AML, ALL, CML, MM, lymphoma | CD34+ selected stem cell graft, myeloablative conditioning, ATG. No post-transplant immunosuppression | Adults ( | Repeated rounds of stimulation with CMV lysate | Stem cell donor | Escalating doses: 105/kg−3 × 106/kg; 13–37 days after HSCT (prophylaxis) | Reduced CMV reactivation compared to control and accelerated pathogen-specific immune reconstitution; aGVHD grade II in 1/25 patients. | Perruccio et al. ( |
| Acute leukemia and others | Haploidentical HSCT with post-transplant immunosuppression | Children ( | IFN-γ cytokine capture for CMV-pp65 specific T cells | Stem cell donor | 2.5–16.6 × 103/kg; in patients with refractory CMV infection | Complete or partial viral clearance in 10/11 patients;No | Feuchtinger et al. ( |
| AML/ALL and others | Unmanipulated graft, | Children and adults ( | Repeated rounds of stimulation with CMV-pp65 peptide mixture | Stem cell donor | 0.7–15.4 × 107/kg (median 2.7 × 107/kg); ≥2 doses in 14 patients with refractory CMV infection; 53–127 (median 69) days after HSCT | Viral clearance in 27/32 patients within 4 weeks; aGVHD grade II in 1/32 patients | Pei et al. ( |
| Malignant and non-malignant diseases | Haploidentical ( | Children and adults | Multivirus-specific T cell lines | Third-party off-the-shelf | 2 × 107 total cells; Treatment of infection with one ( | Response rates: | Tzannou et al. ( |
aGVHD, acute graft- vs.-host disease; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; CML, chronic myeloid leukemia; HHV-6, Human Herpesvirus 6; MM, multiple myeloma.
This study also included patients who received Aspergillus-specific T cells.
This study also included patients who received matched unrelated or umbilical cord blood transplant.
Selected studies using allodepletion, alloanergy induction, and other immune modulation to facilitate T cell addback after haploidentical HSCT.
| Malignant and non-malignant diseases | CD34+ selected graft, myeloablative conditioning, ATG. No post-transplant immunosuppression | Infants or young children ( | Anti-CD25 immunotoxin-mediated allo-depletion using non-donor parent PBMC as alllo-stimulators | 1–8 × 105/kg in dose-escalating cohorts; | CD4 count ≥200/μL after 13 weeks (median) in 10 evaluable patients; massive expansion of T cells within 4 weeks of T cell infusion in three patients with CMV infection; aGVHD II-IV in 0/15 patients. | Andre-Schmutz et al. ( |
| Malignant and non-malignant diseases | CD34+ selected graft, myeloablative and non-myeloablative-conditioning, alemtuzumab. 7/16 patients received tacrolimus/CSA | Children ( | Anti-CD25 immunotoxin-mediated allo-depletion using recipient EBV-LCL as allo-stimulators | Two dose levels: | Dose level 2 significantly accelerated reconstitution of both CD4 and CD8 T cells, with CMV and EBV-specific responses observed in 4 of 6 evaluable patients at 2–4 months after HSCT; aGVHD II-IV in 2/16 patients | Amrolia et al. ( |
| Malignant diseases | CD34+ selected graft, myeloablative conditioning, ATG. No post-transplant immunosuppression | Adults ( | Photodepletion with TH9402 using recipient PBMC as allo-stimulators | Phase I dose-finding study: 1 × 104/kg−5 × 106/kg; 28–40 days after HSCT | aGVHD I–II in 5/19 patients No aGVHD III–IV | Roy et al. ( |
| High-risk AML and ALL | CD34+ selected graft, myeloablative conditioning, ATG. | Adults ( | Photodepletion with TH9402 using recipient PBMC as allo-stimulators | Phase II study: 2 × 106/kg; | aGVHD I–II in 22 %; 1 year TRM: 32% | Roy et al. ( |
| Malignant and non-malignant diseases | Allo-anergized bone marrow with post-transplant CSA/MTX | Children ( | CTLA-4-Ig mediated alloanergy induction, using recipient PBMC as allo-stimulators | 1.6–5.5 × 107/kg (contained in BM graft) on Day 0 of HSCT | CD4 count ≥400/μL by 6 months and CD4/CD8 ratio ≥ 1.4 by 7 months in all five surviving patients; Gut aGVHD in 3/11 patients; DFS at last follow-up: 5/12 patients | Guinan et al. ( |
| High-risk acute leukemia or MDS | CD34+ selected graft, myeloablative conditioning, ATG. No post-transplant immunosuppression | Children ( | Anti-B7.1-mediated alloanergy induction using PBMC from recipient or a second haploidentical donor as allo-stimulators | Escalating dose levels: | Functional virus-specific CD4 T cells detectable at a median of 9, 3, and 2.5 months and CD8 T cells at median of 9, 4, and 3 months in dose level 1/no DLI, dose level 2, and dose level 3, respectively; aGVHD II-IV in 5/16 patients; DFS at last follow-up: 4/16 patients | Davies et al. ( |
| High-risk AML, ALL, lymphoma | CD34+ selected graft, myeloablative conditioning. No ATG or other serotherapy. No post-transplant immunosuppression. | Adults ( | Fresh Tregs (G-CSF mobilized) isolated by CD25-immuno-magnetic selection on Day (– 4), CD34+ selected stem cells and Tcon on Day 0. | Two dose levels: | CD4 count ≥100/μL and ≥ 200/μL at median of 42 (28–135) and 67 (40–146) days after HSCT, respectively; CD8 count ≥100/μL and ≥200/μL at median of 38 (19–95) and 48 (21–95) days, respectively; aGVHD II-IV in 2/26 patients; 12-month DFS: 46% | Di Ianni et al. ( |
| High-risk AML and ALL | CD34+ selected graft, myeloablative conditioning. No serotherapy ( | Adults ( | As above | Treg 2.5 × 106/kg (mean) + Tcon 1.1 × 106/kg (mean) | CD4 count ≥100/μL and ≥200/μL at median of 40 (25–150) and 55 (45–160) days after HSCT, respectively; CD8 count ≥100/μL and ≥200/μL at median of 45 (18–100) and 60 (50–140) days, respectively; aGVHD II-IV in 15%; Relapse: 2/41 patients; 46-month DFS: 56% | Martelli et al. ( |
| AML, ALL or lymphoma | CD34+ selected graft, myeloablative conditioning. ATG. | Adults ( | IL-10 mediated alloanergy induction using recipient CD3-depleted peripheral blood cells as allo-stimulators | T cells dose of 3–5 × 105/kg; 28–64 days after HSCT | CD4 count >150/μL and CD8 count >100/μL at a median of 30 (15–102) days in the four long-term survivors; aGVHD II-III in 5/12 patients; DFS at last follow-up: 4/12 patients | Bacchetta et al. ( |
aGVHD, acute graft- vs.-host disease; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; BM, bone marrow; CSA, cyclosporine; CTLA-4-Ig, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein-4-immunoglobulin bound to human IgG1 constant region; DFS, disease-free survival; MDS, myelodysplastic syndrome; MM, multiple myeloma; MTX, methotrexate; OS, overall survival; PBMC, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; TRM, transplant related mortality.
This study included haploidentical HSCT (n = 13) and matched unrelated HSCT (n = 3), with one patient receiving two transplants.
Some of the patients (n = 24) in this study have been reported in the Di Ianni study (.
Clinical trials using safety switch gene-modified T cells after haploidentical HSCT.
| High-risk leukemia | CD34+ selected stem cell graft, myeloablative conditioning, ATG. No post-transplant immunosuppression | Adults ( | HSVtk modification of T cells | Intrapatient dose escalation at monthly interval if no GVHD: | HSVtk T cells engrafted in 22 patients: CD3+ count >100/μL at median of 75 (34–127) days after HSCT and 23 (13–42) days after HSVtk T cell infusion; aGVHD II-IV in 9/28, extensive cGVHD in 1/28, all resolved with ganciclovir administration | Ciceri et al. ( |
| High risk acute leukemia and MDS | Phase I, allodepleted T cell add-back after CD34-selected transplant. 9/10 patients received alemtuzumab for | Children ( | iCasp9 modification with prior T cell allodepletion using CD25-immunotoxin | Escalating doses: | iCasp9 T cells: 54/μL and 63/μL at 1 and 2 years after HSCT, respectively; aGVHD I- II in 4/10 patients, all resolved with AP1903 administration | Di Stasi et al. ( |
| Acute leukemia and other malignant diseases | Phase I, non-allodepleted T cell add-back after CD34-selected transplant. All 10 patients received alemtuzumab for | Children ( | iCasp9 modification of T cells | Dose level 1: 104/kg ( | Viral-specific iCasp9 T cells were detected in eight patients; | Zhou et al. ( |
| Acute leukemia and non-malignant diseases | Pilot followed by phase II study. TCR αβ+ T cell and CD19+ B cell depleted stem cell graft, myeloablative conditioning and ATG. No post-transplant immunosuppression NCT02065869 and EudraCT:2014-000584-41 Long term follow-up: NCT03733249 and EudraCT: 2016-003226-16 | Children ( | iCasp9 modification of T cells (BPX-501) | Pilot ( | iCasp9 (BPX-501) T cells peaked at 9 months after infusion (mean 144/μL) and persisted for at least 2 years (mean 62/ μL); | Merli et al. ( |
| High-risk acute leukemia | CD34-selected stem cell graft with myeloablative conditioning and ATG for | Adults ( | iCasp9 modification of T cells | Dose level 1: 0.5 × 106/kg ( | One patient in DFS at >3.5 years; | Zhang et al. ( |
aGVHD, acute graft- vs.-host disease; DFS, disease free survival; MDS, myelodysplastic syndrome.
Additional clinical trials on ClinicalTrials.gov involving iCasp9 T cell addback following haploidentical HSCT.
| NCT03301168 | Malignant and non-malignant diseases | Phase II, T cell add-back after TCR αβ, and B cell deplete stem cell transplant | Children | Multiple locations, USA | Oct-4-2017 Active/not recruiting | |
| NCT01744223 | Malignant diseases | Phase I/II, T cell add-back after T cell deplete transplant | Adults | Multiple locations, USA | Dec-6-2012 Active/not recruiting | |
| NCT02477878; EudraCT:2015-005176-17 | Malignant diseases | Phase I, treatment of relapse or minimal residual disease after allogeneic HSCT | Adults | Multiple locations, USA & Italy | Jun-23-2015 Active/not recruiting | This study includes matched related and haploidentical HSCT |
| NCT03459170 | Malignant diseases | Phase I, treatment of relapse or minimal residual disease after allogeneic HSCT | Children | Italy | Mar-8-2018 Recruiting | This study includes matched related and haploidentical HSCT |
| NCT03639844 | Non-malignant diseases | T cell add-back after TCR αβ and B cell deplete transplant | Children and young adults | Multiple locations, USA | Aug-21-2018 | Expanded access protocol |
| NCT03699475 | Malignant diseases | Phase II/III, TCR αβ and B cell deplete transplant with iCasp9 T cell addback vs. Haploidentical HSCT with PTCy | Children and adults | Nashville, TN and San Antonio, TX | Oct-8-2018/Recruiting | |
| NCT02231710 | Non-malignant diseases | Phase I, T cell add-back after T cell deplete transplant | Children and adults | Seattle, WA | Sep-4-2014 Active/not recruiting | Closed after enrolling one patient |
Excludes studies listed on .
Figure 2Integration site and TCR analysis on safety switch gene-modified T cells. The safety switch transgene is integrated into the host cell genome, with 1–3 copies of integrants per cell. The region of the genomic DNA in which the transgene integrates (indicated by a unique color) is unique to each integration event and all progenies from that cell can be identified through the unique integration site. Similarly, each T cell bears a unique TCR (indicated by a unique color), which is passed on to all progenies. However, two cells bearing the same TCR may be separately gene-modified, resulting in two clones of T cells which bear the same TCR but with different integration site. Surface markers, for example ΔCD19 or ΔLNGFR, enable identification of safety switch gene-modified T cells by flow cytometry and can be used for cell sort before TCR sequencing. The concurrent analysis of TCR and integration site can provide high resolution data on the clonal origin of safety switch gene-modified T cells.