| Literature DB >> 35212892 |
Arushi Khurana1, Yi Lin2.
Abstract
OPINION STATEMENT: The therapeutic armamentarium has significantly expanded since the approval of various CD19-targeting chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) therapies in non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). These CAR-Ts are patient-specific and require a complex, resource, and time-consuming process. While this appears promising, autologous CAR-Ts are limited due to the lack of accessibility, manufacturing delays, and variable product quality. To overcome these, allogeneic (allo) CARs from healthy donors appear appealing. These can be immediately available as "off the shelf" ready-to-use products of standardized and superior quality exempt from the effects of an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment and prior treatments, and potentially with lower healthcare utilization using industrialized scale production. Allogeneic CARs, however, are not devoid of complications and require genomic editing, especially with αβ T cells to avoid graft versus host disease (GvHD) and allo-rejection by the recipient's immune system. Tools for genomic editing such as TALEN and CRISPR provide promise to develop truly "off the shelf" universal CARs and further advance the field of cellular immunotherapy. Several allogeneic CARs are currently in early phase clinical trials, and preliminary data is encouraging. Longer follow-up is required to truly assess the feasibility and safety of these techniques in the patients. This review focuses on the strategies for developing allogeneic CARs along with cell sources and clinical experience thus far in lymphoma.Entities:
Keywords: Allogeneic CAR-T; CAR-T; Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35212892 PMCID: PMC8873350 DOI: 10.1007/s11864-021-00920-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Treat Options Oncol ISSN: 1534-6277
Differences between the autologous and allogenic CAR-Ts
| Characteristic | Autologous | Allogeneic |
|---|---|---|
| Cell source | Self | Non-self healthy donor, iPSC derived |
| Production time | 2–5 weeks | Ready to use/off the shelf |
| Cell type | Autologous T cells (may or may not be manipulated for T cell composition) | Gene-edited αβ T cells, γδ T cells, NK cells, iNKT cells |
| Manufacturing process | • Individualized manufacturing for each patient • Reduced accessibility due to manufacturing wait and potential impact of patients’ native cells on manufacturing success • High variability in product composition due to inherent patient heterogeneity in T cell composition and immune profile | • Single manufacturing from one donor or cell source potentially used to treat many patients • Pre-made and ready to use to remove the manufacturing wait time • Possible standardization and control over T cell composition in the product |
| Side Effects | • Cytokine release syndrome • Immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome • B cell aplasia • CAR gene editing-related oncogenic potential | • Same as autologous PLUS • More immune suppression and risk for infection from more intense lymphodepletion for prevention of allo rejection • Graft versus host disease • Allo rejection of the infusion product |
| Redosing | Response with the same CAR-T unfavorable in aggressive lymphoma, possibly more promising in FL More studies needed to understand mechanisms of relapse and resistance to redosing | Benefit to be investigated Risk of alloimmunization—donor-specific antibodies |
| Persistence | Months to years | Weeks to months |
| Cost | High | Unknown (projected to be lower) |
Fig. 1Various allogeneic CARs with genomic editing techniques (abbreviations: CAR, chimeric antigen receptor; TAA, tumor associated antigen; B2M, β2 microglobulin; Ab, antibody; TCR, T cell receptor; FasL, Fas ligand; iPSC, induced pluripotent stem cells; TRAIL, tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand; IL, interleukin; NKG2D, natural killer group 2 member D).
Ongoing clinical trials of allogeneic CARs in non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma
| Trial ID/Phase | Company/product name | CAR Cell type | CAR Target | Gene Editing technology and modification | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT04176913/Phase I | Nanjing Legend Biotechnology Co., Ltd./LUCAR-20S | T-cells | CD20 | Not specified | China |
| NCT04384393/Phase I | Fundamenta Therapeutics, Ltd./ThisCART19 | T-cells | CD19 | Not specified | China |
| NCT04601181/Phase I | Fundamenta Therapeutics, Ltd./ThisCART22 | T-cells | CD22 | Not specified | China |
| NCT04288726/Phase I | CD30.CAR-EBV Specific T cells | EBV-CTLs | CD30 | Not specified | US |
| NCT01430390/Phase I | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center/ EBV-CTLs | EBV-CTLs | CD19 | Not specified | US |
| NCT03768310/Phase I | Baylor College of Medicine | Multivirus-Specific Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes | CD19 | Not specified | US |
| NCT02050347/Phase I (CARPASCIO study) | Baylor College of Medicine | Donor derived T-cells post Allo transplant | CD19 | Not specified | US |
| NCT04538599/open label safety | He Huang, Zhejiang University/ RD13-01 | T-cells | CD7 | Not specified | China |
| NCT04264039/Phase I | Xinqiao Hospital of Chongqing; Gracell Biotechnology Shanghai Co., Ltd./Universal CD19CAR-T | T-cells | CD19 | Not specified | China |
| NCT03398967/Phase I-II | Chinese PLA General Hospital/ Universal CRISPR-Cas9 Gene-Edited Dual CAR-T Cells | T-cells | CD19 and CD20/ CD22 | CRISPR-Cas9 Gene-Editing, disruption of endogenous TCR and β2M genes | China |
| NCT04026100 /Phase I | Nanjing Bioheng Biotech Co., Ltd./CTA101 | T-cells | CD19/CD22 | CRISPR-Cas9 Gene-Editing TRAC region and CD52 gene disruption | China |
| NCT04035434/Phase I | CRISPR Therapeutics AG/CTX 110 | T-cells | CD19 | CRISPR-Cas9 Gene-Editing MHC-1 Knockout by β2M disruption and CAR inserted into TRAC locus | US, Australia, Germany, Canada |
NCT04502446/Phase I (COBALT-LYM) | CRISPR Therapeutics AG/CTX130 | T-cells | CD70 | CRISPR-Cas9 Gene-Editing – CAR inserted into TRAC 9locus, MHC-1 Knockout by β2M disruption | US, Australia, Canada |
| NCT03939026/Phase I | Allogene Therapeutics/ALLO-501 | T-cells | CD19 | TRAC and CD52 Genes disruption by TALEN | US |
| NCT04416984/Phase I-II** | Allogene Therapeutics (ALPHA 2 study)/ALLO-501A | T-cells | CD19 | TALEN mediated TCR and CD52 knockout | US |
| NCT03166878/Phase I-II | Chinese PLA General Hospital/UCART019 | T-cells | CD19 | CRISPR-Cas9 Gene-Editing disruption of endogenous TCR and β2M genes | China |
| NCT03229876/Safety and efficacy study | Bioray Laboratories/ CD19-UCART | T-cells | CD19 | CRISPR-Cas9 Gene-Editing disruption of endogenous TCR and β2M genes | China |
| NCT03666000/Phase I-IIa (Cohort N)** | Precision BioSciences, Inc./ PBCAR0191 | T-cells | CD19 | ARCUS mediated gene editing – insertion of CAR at the TRAC gene locus | US |
| NCT04030195/Phase I-IIa | Precision BioSciences, Inc./ PBCAR20A | T-cells | CD20 | CAR inserted into TCR locus | US |
| NCT04637763/Phase I (ANTLER study) | Caribou Biosciences, Inc./CB-010 | T-cells | CD19 | CRISPR-Cas9 Gene-Editing – CD19 CAR inserted into T cell genome, TRAC and PD 1 gene disrupted | US |
| NCT04264078/early phase I | Xinqiao Hospital of Chongqing, Gracell Biotechnology Shanghai Co., Ltd. | T-cells | CD7 | CRISPR-Cas9 Gene-Editing – TRAC gene locus, and CD7 knockout to prevent fratricide | China |
| NCT03774654/Phase I (ANCHOR study) | Baylor College of Medicine/ CD19.CAR-aNKT cells KUR-502 | NKT cells | CD19 | Single gamma retroviral vector – CD19 CAR, IL15 and short hairpin RNA expression (downregulates HLA I, II) | US |
| NCT04245722/Phase I | Fate Therapeutics/FT596 | iPSC derived NK cells | CD19 | US | |
| NCT04023071/Phase I-Ib | Fate Therapeutics/FT516 | iPSC derived NK cells | non-cleavable CD16 (hnCD16) Fc receptor | US | |
| NCT04673617/PhaseI-II | Artiva Biotherapeutics, Inc. | cord blood-derived NK cells | selected for B-KIR haplotype and the homozygous polymorphism of CD16 | US | |
| NCT04629729/Phase I | Fate Therapeutics/FT819 | iPSC derived T cells | CD19 | CAR inserted into TRAC locus | US |
| NCT02892695/Phase I-II | PersonGen BioTherapeutics (Suzhou) Co., Ltd./PCAR-119 | NK cells | CD19 | Derived from NK-92 cells line | China |
| NCT04887012/Phase I | Second Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University/CAR NK019 | HLA Haploidentical NK cells | CD19 | China | |
| NCT04639739/Early phase I | Chongqing Precision Biotech Co., Ltd | NK cells | CD19 | China | |
| NCT02656147/Phase I | Beijing Doing Biomedical Co., Ltd. | γδ T cells | CD19 | China | |