| Literature DB >> 34123825 |
Laetitia Vercellino1, Dorine de Jong2, Roberta di Blasi3, Salim Kanoun4, Ran Reshef5, Lawrence H Schwartz6, Laurent Dercle6.
Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells are a novel immunotherapy available for patients with refractory/relapsed non-Hodgkin lymphoma. In this indication, clinical trials have demonstrated that CAR T-cells achieve high rates of response, complete response, and long-term response (up to 80%, 60%, and 40%, respectively). Nonetheless, the majority of patients ultimately relapsed. This review provides an overview about the current and future role of medical imaging in guiding the management of non-Hodgkin lymphoma patients treated with CAR T-cells. It discusses the value of predictive and prognostic biomarkers to better stratify the risk of relapse, and provide a patient-tailored therapeutic strategy. At baseline, high tumor volume (assessed on CT-scan or on [18F]-FDG PET/CT) is a prognostic factor associated with treatment failure. Response assessment has not been studied extensively yet. Available data suggests that current response assessment developed on CT-scan or on [18F]-FDG PET/CT for cytotoxic systemic therapies remains relevant to estimate lymphoma response to CAR T-cell therapy. Nonetheless, atypical patterns of response and progression have been observed and should be further analyzed. The potential advantages as well as limitations of artificial intelligence and radiomics as tools providing high throughput quantitative imaging features is described.Entities:
Keywords: CAR T-cell; CT scan; FDG PET/CT; immunotherapy; lymphoma; prognostic biomarker
Year: 2021 PMID: 34123825 PMCID: PMC8195284 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.664688
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Response to CAR T-cell therapy. 66 year-old patient with past medical history of follicular lymphoma. The patient relapsed with DLBCL, treated with two lines of prior chemotherapy. Baseline imaging showed a low tumor volume (TMTV was 47 mm3) which is typically associated with favorable outcome and response to CAR T-cell therapy. Inguinal lymphadenopathies are indicated with black (on Maximum Intensity Projection) and white arrows (on axial fusion image). Follow-up imaging showed a partial response on CT-scan with residual disease. [18F]-FDG PET reclassified this patient as a complete metabolic response which persisted at month-6.
Figure 2Progression in a patient treated with CAR T-cell therapy. 68 year-old patient with past medical history of DLBCL diagnosed one year prior to treatment initiation. Patient had Stage IV disease, with rearrangement of the MYC and BCL6 genes, and treated with two prior lines of chemotherapy. Black (on Maximum Intensity Projection) and white arrows (on axial fusion images) show infradiaphragmatic lymphadenopathies, with muscular infiltration. Baseline imaging showed high tumor volume which is typically associated with unfavorable outcome and lower response rate to CAR T-cell therapy. Follow-up imaging showed a progression on CT-scan as well as on [18F]-FDG PET. At month-1, there were new lesions as well as an increase in tumor volume. The prognosis was poor; hence salvage treatment and later best supportive care were initiated. Patient died at month-2.