| Literature DB >> 32477359 |
Marco Cerrano1,2, Marco Ruella3, Miguel-Angel Perales4, Candida Vitale1,2, Danilo Giuseppe Faraci1,2, Luisa Giaccone1,2, Marta Coscia1,2, Molly Maloy4, Miriam Sanchez-Escamilla4,5, Hesham Elsabah6, Afraa Fadul6, Enrico Maffini7, Gianfranco Pittari6, Benedetto Bruno1,2.
Abstract
Research on CAR T cells has achieved enormous progress in recent years. After the impressive results obtained in relapsed and refractory B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and aggressive B-cell lymphomas, two constructs, tisagenlecleucel and axicabtagene ciloleucel, were approved by FDA. The role of CAR T cells in the treatment of B-cell disorders, however, is rapidly evolving. Ongoing clinical trials aim at comparing CAR T cells with standard treatment options and at evaluating their efficacy earlier in the disease course. The use of CAR T cells is still limited by the risk of relevant toxicities, most commonly cytokine release syndrome and neurotoxicity, whose management has nonetheless significantly improved. Some patients do not respond or relapse after treatment, either because of poor CAR T-cell expansion, lack of anti-tumor effects or after the loss of the target antigen on tumor cells. Investigators are trying to overcome these hurdles in many ways: by testing constructs which target different and/or multiple antigens or by improving CAR T-cell structure with additional functions and synergistic molecules. Alternative cell sources including allogeneic products (off-the-shelf CAR T cells), NK cells, and T cells obtained from induced pluripotent stem cells are also considered. Several trials are exploring the curative potential of CAR T cells in other malignancies, and recent data on multiple myeloma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia are encouraging. Given the likely expansion of CAR T-cell indications and their wider availability over time, more and more highly specialized clinical centers, with dedicated clinical units, will be required. Overall, the costs of these cell therapies will also play a role in the sustainability of many health care systems. This review will focus on the major clinical trials of CAR T cells in B-cell malignancies, including those leading to the first FDA approvals, and on the new settings in which these constructs are being tested. Besides, the most promising approaches to improve CAR T-cell efficacy and early data on alternative cell sources will be reviewed. Finally, we will discuss the challenges and the opportunities that are emerging with the advent of CAR T cells into clinical routine.Entities:
Keywords: CAR T cells; adoptive immunotherapy; cellular therapy; leukemia; lymphoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32477359 PMCID: PMC7235422 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.00888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Axicabtagene ciloleucel (axi-cel or KTE-C19) and tisagenlecleucel (tisa-cel or CTL019) structure. The 2 constructs share identical recognition (FMC63-scFv) and signaling (CD3ζ) domains but the co-stimulatory domains differ: CD28 for axi-cel and 4-1BB for tisa-cel.
Selected clinical trials of CAR T cells in B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
| B-ALL | CD19 | Tisagenlecleucel (CTL019, Kymriah®) | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 75, R/R pediatric/AYA | ORR 81% | RFS | 47% | 13% | UPenn/Novartis | ELIANA | ( |
| KTE-X19 | CD28 | Second (2nd) | Retroviral | 45, R/R adult B-ALL | ORR 82% | Median DOR 12.9 mo | 29% | 38% | Kite, Gilead | ZUMA-3 | ( | ||
| 24, R/R pediatric/AYA B-ALL | CR + CRi rate | ongoing remission | 22–75% | 11–36% | ZUMA-4 | ( | |||||||
| 19-28z-CAR | CD28 | Second (2nd) | Retroviral | 53, R/R adult B-ALL | CR 83% | Unknown | 26% | 42% | MSKCC/Juno | ( | |||
| CD19-28z-CAR | CD28 | Second (2nd) | Retroviral | 19, R/R pediatric/AYA | CR 67% | 12-mo LFS 78.8% | 28% | 5% | NCI | ( | |||
| CD4+/CD8+ CD19-BBz-CAR | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 45, R/R pediatric/AYA B-ALL | MRD− CR 89% | Unknown | 23% | 21% | SCH | PLAT-02 | ( | ||
| CD19-BBz.EGFRt-CAR | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 30, R/R adult B-ALL | CR 93% | Unknown | 23% | 50% | FHCRC | ( | |||
| UCART19 | 4-1BB | Allogeneic CAR T cells, gene editing with TALEN | Lentiviral | 7, R/R pediatric B-ALL | CR + CRi 88% | Ongoing remission 28% | 15% | 0% | MDACC, UCL etc./Servier | PALL | ( | ||
| 13, R/R | Ongoing remission 21% | CALM | |||||||||||
| CD22 | CD22-BBz-CAR | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 21, R/R pediatric/adult B-ALL | CR 73% | Median DOR | 0% | 0% | NIH | ( |
, Penn/CHOP grading scale;
, NCI 2014 consensus grading scale modified by Lee DW et al. (45);
, MSKCC criteria;
, CTCAE v4.02;
, CTCAE v4.03;
CTCAE v5.0.
ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; R/R, relapse/refractory; AYA, adolescent and young adult; ORR, overall response rate; CR, complete remission; CRi, complete remission with incomplete hematologic recovery; MRD, minimal residual disease; mo, months; DOR, duration of response; EFS, event-free survival; RFS, relapse-free survival; LFS, leukemia-free survival; DFS, disease-free survival; NR, not reached; CRS, cytokine release syndrome; NTX, neurotoxicity; UPenn, University of Pennsylvania Hospital; SCH, Seattle Children's Hospital; FHCRC, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center; MSKCC, Memorial Sloane Kettering Cancer Center; NCI, National Cancer Institute; MDACC, MD Anderson Cancer Center; UCL, University College of London.
Selected clinical trials of CAR T cells in B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas and chronic lymphocytic leukemia.
| B-cell NHL | CD19 | Axicabtagene ciloleucel | CD28 | Second (2nd) | Retroviral | 108, R/R DLBCL, | ORR 83% | Median DOR | 11% | 32% | NCI/Kite, Gilead | ZUMA-1 | ( |
| KTE-X19 | 68, R/R MCL | ORR 93% | Unknown | 15% | 31% | ZUMA-2 | ( | ||||||
| Tisagenlecleucel (CTL019, Kymriah®) | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 111, R/R | ORR 52% | 12-mo RFS 65% | 22% | 12% | UPenn/Novartis | JULIET | ( | ||
| Lisocabtagene maraleucel (JCAR017) | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 269, R/R DLBCL, t-FL, | ORR 73% | 12-mo DOR | 2% | 10% | FHCRC/Juno, Celgene | TRANSCEND-001 | ( | ||
| Lisocabtagene maraleucel | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 11, R/R B-NHL | ORR 91% | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Celgene/Juno | PLATFORM | ( | ||
| JCAR014 + Durvalumab | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 15, R/R | ORR 50% | Ongoing remission 33% | 7% | 0% | FHCRC/Juno, MedImmune | ( | |||
| CD20 | CD20-CAR | None | First (1st) | Plasmidic | 7, R/R | ORR 43% | Median DOR | 0% | 0% | FHCRC | ( | ||
| scFvFc.CD28-CD137z | CD28 4-1BB | Third (3rd) | Plasmidic | 3, R/R | ORR 100% | Unknown | 0% | 0% | FHCRC | ( | |||
| CLL | CD19 | Tisagenlecleucel (CTL019, Kymriah®) | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 14, R/R CLL/SLL | ORR 57% | Unknown | 43% | 7% | UPenn/Novartis | ( | |
| Lisocabtagene maraleucel (JCAR017) | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 23, R/R CLL/SLL | ORR 81% | Unknown | 9% | 22% | Juno, Celgene | TRANSCEND-CLL-004 | ( | ||
| CTL119.BBz-CAR + Ibrutinib | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 19, r/r cll | ORR 71% | Ongoing remission 53% at 12 mo (MRD− 37%) | 16% | 5% | UPenn | ( | |||
| CD19-BBz.EGFRt-CAR | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 24, r/r cll | ORR 71% | Unknown | 25% | 25% | FHCRC | ( |
, Penn/CHOP grading scale;
, NCI 2014 consensus grading scale modified by Lee DW et al. (45);
, CTCAE v3.0;
, CTCAE v4.03.
NHL, non-Hodgkin lymphoma; DLBCL, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; t-FL, transformed follicular lymphoma; FL3B, grade 3B follicular lymphoma; MCL, mantle cell lymphoma; PMBCL, primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma; HGBCL, high-grade B-cell lymphoma; CLL/SLL, chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma; R/R, relapse/refractory; ORR, overall response rate; CR, complete remission; PR, partial response; MRD, minimal residual disease; DOR, duration of response; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression-free survival; RFS, relapse-free survival; CRS, cytokine release syndrome; NTX, neurotoxicity; UPenn, University of Pennsylvania Hospital; FHCRC, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center; NCI, National Cancer Institute.
Figure 2Possible strategies to improve CAR T-cell efficacy. (A) Pooled CAR T cells, consisting of two or more T-cell populations expressing CAR with distinct antigen specificities. (B) Dual CAR T cells are engineered to co-express CAR molecules with different antigen specificities. (C) Tandem CAR T cells express a bispecific CAR construct harboring two ligand-binding domains with different antigen specificities. (D) The murine-derived scFv is replaced in fully human CAR T cells, in order to limit the occurrence of immune rejection. (E) Armored CAR T cells are modified to secrete cytokines or to express immunomodulatory ligands together with the CAR. (F) CAR T cells can be co-administered with pharmacological agents with immunomodulatory properties.
Selected clinical trials of CAR T cells in multiple myeloma.
| MM | BCMA | BCMA.CAR | CD28 | Second (2nd) | Retroviral | 16, R/R MM | ORR 81% | Unknown | 38% | 6% | NIH | ( | |
| CART-BCMA | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 25, R/R MM | ORR 48% | Median DOR | 32% | 12% | UPenn/Novartis | ( | |||
| bb2121 | 4-1BB | Second (2nd) | Lentiviral | 33, R/R MM | ORR 85% | Median DOR 10.9 mo | 6% | 3% | NIH/Bluebird Bio, Celgene | ( | |||
| LCAR-B38M | None | First (1st) | Lentiviral | 57, R/R MM | ORR 88% | Median DOR 14 mo | 7% | 2% | Nanjing Legend Biotech | LEGEND-2 | ( | ||
| k-Ig LC | κ. CAR | CD28 | Second (2nd) | Retroviral | 7, R/R MM | ≥PR 57% | Unknown | 0% | 0% | BCM | CHARKALL | ( | |
| NKG2DL | CM-CS1 T | CD3ζ plus DAP10 | Second (2nd) | Retroviral | 5, R/R MM | – | – | – | – | DFCI/Celyad | ( |
, Penn/CHOP grading scale;
, NCI 2014 consensus grading scale modified by Lee DW et al. (45);
, CTCAE v4.0;
, CTCAE v4.02;
, CTCAE v4.03.
MM, multiple myeloma; R/R., relapse/refractory; ORR, overall response rate; CR, complete remission; PR, partial response; VGPR, very good partial response; SD, stable disease; wk, weeks; EFS, event-free survival; DOR, duration of response; PFS, progression-free survival; CRS, cytokine release syndrome; NTX, neurotoxicity; UPenn, University of Pennsylvania Hospital; DFCI, Dana-Faber Cancer Institute; NIH, National Institutes of Health; BCM, Baylor College of Medicine.