| Literature DB >> 31650176 |
Kevin J Curran1,2,3, Steven P Margossian4,5, Nancy A Kernan1,2,3, Lewis B Silverman4,5, David A Williams4,5, Neerav Shukla1, Rachel Kobos1, Christopher J Forlenza1, Peter Steinherz1,2, Susan Prockop1,2, Farid Boulad1,2, Barbara Spitzer1,2, Maria I Cancio1,2, Jaap Jan Boelens1, Andrew L Kung1, Yasmin Khakoo1,2,6, Victoria Szenes1, Jae H Park3,7, Craig S Sauter3, Glenn Heller8, Xiuyan Wang3,9, Brigitte Senechal3,9, Richard J O'Reilly1, Isabelle Riviere3,7,9, Michel Sadelain3,7, Renier J Brentjens3,7.
Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have demonstrated clinical benefit in patients with relapsed/refractory (R/R) B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). We undertook a multicenter clinical trial to determine toxicity, feasibility, and response for this therapy. A total of 25 pediatric/young adult patients (age, 1-22.5 years) with R/R B-ALL were treated with 19-28z CAR T cells. Conditioning chemotherapy included high-dose (3 g/m2) cyclophosphamide (HD-Cy) for 17 patients and low-dose (≤1.5 g/m2) cyclophosphamide (LD-Cy) for 8 patients. Fifteen patients had pretreatment minimal residual disease (MRD; <5% blasts in bone marrow), and 10 patients had pretreatment morphologic evidence of disease (≥5% blasts in bone marrow). All toxicities were reversible, including severe cytokine release syndrome in 16% (4 of 25) and severe neurotoxicity in 28% (7 of 25) of patients. Treated patients were assessed for response, and, among the evaluable patients (n = 24), response and peak CAR T-cell expansion were superior in the HD-Cy/MRD cohorts, as compared with the LD-Cy/morphologic cohorts without an increase in toxicity. Our data support the safety of CD19-specific CAR T-cell therapy for R/R B-ALL. Our data also suggest that dose intensity of conditioning chemotherapy and minimal pretreatment disease burden have a positive impact on response without a negative effect on toxicity. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01860937.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31650176 PMCID: PMC6933289 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2019001641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113