| Literature DB >> 34312462 |
Dean A Lee1, Richard E Champlin2, Stefan O Ciurea3, Piyanuch Kongtim4, Doris Soebbing2, Prashant Trikha1, Gregory Behbehani5, Gabriela Rondon2, Amanda Olson2, Qaiser Bashir2, Alison M Gulbis6, Kaur Indreshpal7, Katayoun Rezvani2,7, Elizabeth J Shpall2,7, Roland Bassett8, Kai Cao9, Andrew St Martin10, Steven Devine11, Mary Horowitz10, Marcelo Pasquini10.
Abstract
In this phase I/II clinical trial, we investigated the safety and efficacy of high doses of mb-IL21 ex vivo expanded donor-derived NK cells to decrease relapse in 25 patients with myeloid malignancies receiving haploidentical stem-cell transplantation (HSCT). Three doses of donor NK cells (1 × 105-1 × 108 cells/kg/dose) were administered on days -2, +7, and +28. Results were compared with an independent contemporaneously treated case-matched cohort of 160 patients from the CIBMTR database.After a median follow-up of 24 months, the 2-year relapse rate was 4% vs. 38% (p = 0.014), and disease-free survival (DFS) was 66% vs. 44% (p = 0.1) in the cases and controls, respectively. Only one relapse occurred in the study group, in a patient with the high level of donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies (DSA) presented before transplantation. The 2-year relapse and DFS in patients without DSA was 0% vs. 40% and 72% vs. 44%, respectively with HR for DFS in controls of 2.64 (p = 0.029). NK cells in recipient blood were increased at day +30 in a dose-dependent manner compared with historical controls, and had a proliferating, mature, highly cytotoxic, NKG2C+/KIR+ phenotype.Administration of donor-derived expanded NK cells after haploidentical transplantation was safe, associated with NK cell-dominant immune reconstitution early post-transplant, preserved T-cell reconstitution, and improved relapse and DFS. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT01904136 ( https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01904136 ).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34312462 PMCID: PMC8727305 DOI: 10.1038/s41375-021-01349-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leukemia ISSN: 0887-6924 Impact factor: 12.883
Demographics and clinical characteristics of the patients and CIBMTR controls.
| Cases | Controls | MAC controls | RIC controls | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 24 | 160 | 81 | 79 |
| Number of centers | 1 | 61 | 38 | 40 |
| Age at transplant, years | ||||
| Median (range) | 46 (18–60) | 44 (19–60) | 45 (19–60) | 43 (19–61) |
| 18–30 | 4 (17) | 37 (23) | 20 (24) | 17 (22) |
| 31–40 | 3 (13) | 26 (16) | 12 (15) | 14 (18) |
| 41–50 | 8 (33) | 31 (19) | 15 (19) | 16 (20) |
| 51–60 | 9 (38) | 66 (41) | 34 (42) | 32 (41) |
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 12 (50) | 84 (53) | 39 (48) | 45 (57) |
| Female | 12 (50) | 76 (48) | 42 (52) | 34 (43) |
| Race | ||||
| Caucasian | 17 (71) | 89 (56) | 47 (58) | 42 (53) |
| African American | 4 (17) | 48 (30) | 23 (28) | 25 (32) |
| Asian | 2 (8) | 13 (8) | 6 (7) | 7 (9) |
| Other | 1 (4) | 1 (1) | 0 | 1 (1) |
| Missing | 0 | 9 (6) | 5 (6) | 4 (5) |
| Ethnicity | ||||
| Hispanic or Latino | 4 (17) | 25 (16) | 14 (17) | 11 (14) |
| Non-Hispanic or non-Latino | 20 (83) | 132 (83) | 65 (80) | 67 (85) |
| Missing | 0 | 3 (2) | 2 (2) | 1 (1) |
| Performance score | ||||
| 90–100 | 18 (75) | 78 (49) | 34 (42) | 44 (56) |
| <90 | 6 (25) | 82 (51) | 47 (58) | 35 (44) |
| HCT-CI | ||||
| 0 | 5 (21) | 30 (19) | 12 (15) | 18 (23) |
| 1 | 3 (13) | 29 (18) | 14 (17) | 15 (19) |
| 2 | 4 (17) | 31 (19) | 15 (19) | 16 (20) |
| 3 | 6 (25) | 31 (19) | 21 (26) | 10 (13) |
| >3 | 6 (25) | 39 (24) | 19 (23) | 20 (25) |
| CMV serostatus | ||||
| Negative | 2 (8) | 41 (26) | 18 (22) | 23 (29) |
| Positive | 22 (92) | 119 (74) | 63 (78) | 56 (71) |
| Donor-specific antibodies | 5 (21) | 35 (22) | 18 (22) | 17 (22) |
| Disease | ||||
| AML | 13 (54) | 104 (65) | 52 (64) | 52 (66) |
| CML | 7 (29) | 24 (15) | 13 (16) | 11 (14) |
| MDS | 4 (17) | 32 (20) | 16 (20) | 16 (20) |
| Cytogenetic risk for AML—number of patientsa | 13 | 136 | 68 | 68 |
| Favorable | 0 | 15 (11) | 8 (12) | 7 (10) |
| Intermediate | 6 (46) | 77 (57) | 35 (51) | 42 (62) |
| Adverse | 7 (54) | 38 (28) | 22 (32) | 16 (24) |
| Not reported | 0 | 6 (4) | 3 (4) | 3 (4) |
| Disease status at transplant—AML | ||||
| First complete remission | 10 (77) | 80 (77) | 40 (77) | 40 (77) |
| Relapse | 3 (23) | 24 (23) | 12 (23) | 12 (23) |
| Disease status at transplant—CML | ||||
| First chronic phase | 4 (57) | 13 (54) | 4 (31) | 9 (82) |
| Second chronic phase | 3 (43) | 11 (46) | 9 (69) | 2 (18) |
| Disease status at transplant—MDS | ||||
| Advanced stage | 4 (100) | 32 (100) | 16 (100) | 16 (100) |
| Graft type | ||||
| Bone marrow | 24 (100) | 42 (26) | 15 (19) | 27 (34) |
| Blood | 0 | 118 (74) | 66 (81) | 52 (66) |
| Conditioning intensity | ||||
| MAC | 0 | 81 (51) | 81 | 0 |
| RIC/NMA | 24 (100) | 79 (49) | 0 | 79 |
| MAC regimens | ||||
| TBI + Cy + Flud | 0 | 1 (1) | 1 (1) | 0 |
| TBI + Flud | 0 | 39 (48) | 39 (48) | 0 |
| TBI + Cy | 0 | 2 (2) | 2 (2) | 0 |
| Bu + Cy + Flud | 0 | 17 (21) | 17 (21) | 0 |
| Bu + Cy | 0 | 4 (5) | 4 (5) | 0 |
| Bu + Flud + Mel | 0 | 2 (2) | 2 (2) | 0 |
| Bu + Flud | 0 | 11 (14) | 11 (14) | 0 |
| Cy + Flud + Mel | 0 | 2 (2) | 2 (2) | 0 |
| Cy + Flud | 0 | 2 (2) | 2 (2) | 0 |
| TBI + other | 0 | 1 (1) | 1 (1) | 0 |
| RIC/NMA regimens | ||||
| TBI + Cy + Flud | 0 | 64 (81) | 0 | 64 (81) |
| TBI + Flud + Mel | 21 (88) | 3 (4) | 0 | 3 (4) |
| Flud + Mel | 3 (13) | 3 (4) | 0 | 3 (4) |
| TBI + Bu + Flud | 0 | 5 (6) | 0 | 5 (6) |
| Bu + Flud | 0 | 2 (3) | 0 | 2 (3) |
| Cy + Flud | 0 | 2 (3) | 0 | 2 (3) |
| GVHD prophylaxis | ||||
| PTCy + TAC + MMF | 24 (100) | 160 (100) | 81 (100) | 79 (100) |
| Year of transplant | ||||
| 2014 | 2 (8) | 27 (17) | 14 (17) | 13 (16) |
| 2015 | 9 (38) | 49 (31) | 25 (31) | 24 (30) |
| 2016 | 5 (21) | 33 (21) | 13 (16) | 20 (25) |
| 2017 | 4 (17) | 33 (21) | 19 (23) | 14 (18) |
| 2018 | 4 (17) | 18 (11) | 10 (12) | 8 (10) |
| Median follow-up of survivors (range), months | 24 (12–51) | 36 (3–59) | 35 (6–59) | 36 (3–49) |
MAC myeloablative conditioning, RIC reduced intensity conditioning, HCT-CI hematopoietic cell transplant comorbidity index, CMV cytomegalovirus, AML acute myelogenous leukemia, MDS myelodysplastic syndrome, TBI total body irradiation, Cy cyclophosphamide, Flud fludarabine, Bu busulfan, Mel melphalan, PTCy post-transplant cyclophosphamide, TAC tacrolimus, MMF mycophenolate mofetil.
aCytogenetic risk for AML was defined as follows:
Favorable: t(15:17), inv(16), del(16q), t(16:16), t(8:21) without del(9q) or complex.
Intermediate: normal karyotype, +6, +8, −Y, del(12p), 11q23, t(9:11).
Adverse/poor: complex karyotype, −5/del(5q), −7/del(7q), abnormal (3q, 9q, 11q, 21q, 17p), t(6:9), t(9:22).
Post-transplant outcomes and multivariable analysis of cases and controls with and without DSA.
| All cases and controls | Cases ( | Controls ( | MAC controls ( | RIC controls ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neutrophil recovery | |||||||
| 28 days | 100% | 89 (83–93)% | 98 (74–100)% | 84 (74–91)% | |||
| Platelet recovery | |||||||
| 100 days | 75 (55–91)% | 88 (82–93)% | 91 (84–97)% | 84 (74–92)% | |||
| Total acute GVHDa | 10 (41.7) | 57 (35.6) | 27 (33.3) | 30 (38) | |||
| Grade 1 | 0 | 9 (5.6) | 3 (3.7) | 6 (7.6) | |||
| Grade 2 | 9 (37.5) | 24 (15) | 12 (14.8) | 12 (15.2) | |||
| Grade 3 | 0 | 20 (12.5) | 10 (12.3) | 10 (12.7) | |||
| Grade 4 | 1 (4.2) | 4 (2.5) | 2 (2.5) | 2 (2.5) | |||
| Chronic GVHD | |||||||
| 1 year | 0% | 39 (31–47)% | 39 (28–50)% | 39 (28–51)% | |||
| 2 years | 0% | 44 (35–52)% | 45 (34–57)% | 41 (30–54)% | |||
| Chronic GVHD severity | |||||||
| Limited | 0% | 13 (8) | 2 (2) | 11 (14) | |||
| Extensive | 0% | 51 (32) | 34 (42) | 17 (22) | |||
| DFS | |||||||
| 1 year | 71 (51–87)% | 54 (46–62)% | 60 (49–70)% | 48 (37–60)% | |||
| 2 years | 66 (46–83)% | 44 (36–53)% | 49 (38–60)% | 40 (28–51)% | |||
| OS | |||||||
| 1 year | 75 (56–90)% | 69 (61–76)% | 69 (58–79)% | 69 (58–79)% | |||
| 2 years | 70 (50–86)% | 58 (49–66)% | 61 (50–72)% | 54 (42–66)% | |||
| Relapse | |||||||
| 1 year | 4 (0–16)% | 31 (24–38)% | 24 (15–34)% | 37 (27–49)% | |||
| 2 years | 4 (0–16)% | 38 (30–46)% | 30 (20–41)% | 46 (34–58)% | |||
| NRM | |||||||
| 1 year | 25 (10–44)% | 15 (10–21)% | 16 (9–25)% | 14 (7–23)% | |||
| 2 years | 30 (13–51)% | 18 (12–24)% | 21 (12–31)% | 14 (7–23)% | |||
DSA donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies, MAC myeloablative conditioning, RIC reduced intensity conditioning, GVHD graft-versus-host disease, DFS disease-free survival, OS overall survival, NRM non-relapse mortality.
aSample size is too small to provide a cumulative incidence of acute GVHD, therefore numbers and percentages are presented.
bVariables considered for analysis: recipient age, recipient gender, recipient race and ethnicity, HCT-CI, KPS, CMV serostatus, graft type, conditioning intensity, and year of transplant.
cConditioning intensity was a significant factor in the Relapse model. The results shown for DFS, NRM and OS are from the models with only the main effect.
dReference group.
eAdjusted for conditioning intensity.
fSince there was 0 relapse event in the cases without DSA, we were unable to perform multivariable analysis for relapse.
Fig. 1Transplant outcomes of NK cell treatment group (cases) and the CIBMTR control group.
A Relapse between cases and controls with the cumulative incidence at 2 years of 4% (95% CI 0–16) vs. 38% (95% CI 30–46), respectively (adjusted P value = 0.014). B DFS of cases vs. controls with the probability at 2 years of 66% (95% CI 51–87) vs. 44% (95% CI 36–53), respectively (adjusted P value = 0.10). C DFS of cases and controls who did not have DSA before transplant. A significantly higher DFS was observed in patients without DSA treated with NK cell infusion compared with controls without DSA with probability at 2 years of 72% vs. 44%, respectively (adjusted P = 0.029). D NRM of cases vs. controls with the probability at 2 years of 30% (95% CI 13–51) vs. 18% (95% CI 12–24), respectively (adjusted P value = 0.37).
Fig. 2Immunologic reconstitution of patients treated on the clinical trial.
A The median number of absolute lymphocytes (ALC), CD56+, CD3+, CD4+, CD8+, CD19+, CD25+, CD45RO, and CD45RA cells at 30, 90, 180, and 360 days after transplant. Number of all lymphocyte subsets gradually increased and returned to normal by day 90 after transplant. B Number of B and T cell subsets after transplant stratified by NK cell dose level. High number of CD56+ cells was observed in patients who received high NK cell dose (dose level 3: 1 × 108/Kg/dose) compared with low (dose level 1: <1 × 107/Kg/dose) and intermediate dose (dose level 2: 1 × 107–3 × 107/Kg/dose) (P = 0.064). At day 90 and 180, a significantly lower number of CD25+ cells in patients who received higher NK cell dose was observed when compared with low and intermediate dose. The mean number of CD25+ cells at day 90 for patients who received low, intermediate, and high NK dose was 15 cells/mm3 (SD 4.2), 42 cells/mm3 (SD 38) and 6.3 cells/mm3 (SD 5.1), respectively (P = 0.005), and at day 180 were 151 cells/mm3 (SD 108), 66 cells/mm3 (SD 44) and 16 cells/mm3 (SD 14), respectively (P = 0.025). No significant difference in number of CD19+, CD4+, CD8+, and CD3+ cells between patients who received different dose of NK cells. Bars and whiskers represent median ± interquartile range.
Fig. 3Immunophenotyping by mass cytometry with stochastic clustering to compare immune reconstitution in patients compared to healthy controls and FC21-NK cell products.
Blood was obtained at the indicated timepoints, and mononuclear cells (MNC) were isolated, processed, and labeled with a 34-parameter panel of heavy-metal conjugated antibodies (Supplementary Information Table S1), along with healthy subject MNC and expanded FC21-NK cell products as controls. Events were collected on a CyTOF 2 mass cytometer (Fluidigm). Events were filtered by sequential gating on live, singlet (event length vs. 191Ir), non-apoptotic (PARP-negative), and hematopoietic (CD45+) cells, and then clustered by visual interactive stochastic neighbor embedding (ViSNE, CytoBank) on CD3, TIGIT, NKP30, NKP46, CD56, NKG2D, CD94, and CD57, using equal sampling to unbias differences in sample event number. ViSNE clusters corresponding to T-cells, standard NK cells, FC21-NK cells, and any remaining MNC were created using the reference samples. The percentage of cells in clusters 1 through 4 were quantified for each sample. Ki67 staining within the gated populations was determined as a surrogate for proliferation. A shows representative plots from two patients, one healthy subject, and one NK cell product, showing expression of key activating surface markers, perforin, and Ki67 across four broad phenotypic clusters identified. Cluster 1 (bottom left) consisting of CD3+ T cells, cluster 2 (top middle) of CD3−CD56dimNKG2DdimCD57+ “standard” NK cells, cluster 3 (top right) consisting of CD56brNKG2DbrNKp46brCD57− (“superbright”) NK cells corresponding to the phenotype of the infused FC21-NK cell product, and cluster 4 (bottom middle) consisting of all remaining cells. Cluster 3 identifies a unique phenotypic signature associated with the FC21-NK cells that is not present in healthy subjects and persists in patients at day 14 (7 days after adoptive transfer) and later (Supplementary Information Fig. S2). B NK cell immune reconstitution in patients over time maintains FC21-NK “superbright” phenotype with high proliferation, expressed as percent of total cell events, of cluster 3 (superbright FC21-NK cells) in healthy donors, FC21-NK cell products, and in patients receiving FC21-NK cell products (across all timepoints). C Proportion of Cluster 1 (T cells) and total NK cells (Cluster 2 + Cluster 3) in blood of study subjects across time. D The ratio of NK cells and T cells for all patients and timepoints assessed (n = 24). E Ki67 staining in FC21-NK cells (Cluster 3), standard NK cells (Cluster 4), and T cells (Cluster 1) in four representative patient samples obtained at day 14 (7 days after the NK cell infusion at day 7). F, G The percent of Ki67+ and Ki67 mean metal intensity (MMI), respectively, in standard NK cells, FC21-NK cells, and T cells for all patients and timepoints assessed (n = 24). Bars and whiskers represent median ± interquartile range, P < 0.0001. H NK cells in clusters 2 (standard NK) and 3 (FC21-NK) as assessed for expression of NKG2C across all patients at all timepoints, with FC21-NK cell infusion products and healthy subjects shown for reference. I the percent of NKG2C + NK cells from all patients at all timepoints, with early (Days 7 and 14) and late (>day 28) timepoints pooled. J NK cells (CD3−/CD56+) gated and assessed for KIR expression and summed for total percentage of KIR + NK cells, and then K plotted across time, with early and late timepoints pooled.