| Literature DB >> 33842363 |
Penny Q Fang1, Jillian R Gunther1, Susan Y Wu1, Bouthaina S Dabaja1, Loretta J Nastoupil2, Sairah Ahmed2, Sattva S Neelapu2, Chelsea C Pinnix1.
Abstract
CAR T-cell therapy has revolutionized the treatment approach to patients with relapsed/refractory hematologic malignancies; however, there continues to be opportunity for improvement in treatment toxicity as well as response durability. Radiation therapy can play an important role in combined modality treatments for some patients undergoing CAR T-cell therapy in various clinical settings. In this review, we discuss the current evidence for RT in the setting of CAR T-cell therapy for patients with hematologic malignancies and propose potential opportunities for future investigation of RT and CAR T-cell treatment synergy. Future research frontiers include investigation of hypotheses including radiation priming of CAR T-cell mediated death, pre-CAR T-cell tumor debulking with radiation therapy, and selection of high risk patients for early radiation salvage after CAR T cell therapy.Entities:
Keywords: chimeric antigen receptor T cells; external beam irradiation; immunotherapy; large B cell lymphoma; radiation therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33842363 PMCID: PMC8027336 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.648655
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Characteristics and results of initial reports of radiation therapy as bridging treatment prior to CD-19 CAR T-cell therapy among non-Hodgkin lymphoma patients.
| Patient population | R/R DLBCL, tFL | R/R DLBCL, tFL, PMBCL | R/R aggressive B-cell lymphoma |
| Product | Axi-cel | Axi-cel | Axi-cel ( |
| Total # Pts apheresed | 12 | 148 | 31 |
| Received CAR T, % | 92% ( | 84% ( | 100% ( |
| Received bridging therapy, % | 100% ( | 50% ( | NR |
| RT alone, % | 42% ( | 65% ( | 60% ( |
| CMT, % | 58% ( | 35% ( | 40% ( |
| Median RT dose, Gy (range) | 20 Gy (6–30) | 35 Gy (9–46) | 37.5 Gy (20–45) |
| RT fraction range | 2–4 Gy | 1.8–5 Gy | 2.2–4 Gy |
| Before apheresis, % | 17% ( | 35% ( | NR |
| After apheresis, % | 83% ( | 65% ( | |
| Comprehensive, % | 42% ( | 53% ( | 60% ( |
| Focal, % | 58% ( | 47% ( | 40% ( |
| CRS grade ≥3, % | 8% ( | 6% ( | 0% ( |
| ICANS grade ≥3, % | 25% ( | 35% ( | 0% ( |
| Median follow up time (range) | 3.3 months (1.1–12) | 11.1 months (95% CI 9.9–12.3) | 12.3 months (9.8–19.9) |
| ORR | 81.8% | 100% for RT alone, 67% for CMT | 80% |
| CR rate | 45.5% | 82% for RT alone, 67% for CMT | 60% |
| 1-year PFS | NR | 44% RT alone, 25% CMT | 20% |
| 1-year OS | NR | 63% RT alone, 25% CMT | 80% |
R/R, relapsed and refractory; DLBCL, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; tFL, transformed follicular lymphoma, PMBCL, primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma; axi-cel, axicabtagene ciloleucel; tisa-cel, tisagenlecleucel; Pts, patients, CAR T, chimeric antigen receptor T cell therapy; RT, radiation therapy; NR, not reported; CMT, combined modality therapy; Gy, gray; CRS, cytokine release syndrome; ICANS, immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome; CI, confidence interval; ORR, overall response rate; CR, complete response; PFS, progression free survival; OS, overall survival.