| Literature DB >> 35258793 |
Yaya Chu1, Margaret Lamb2,3, Mitchell S Cairo1,4,5,6,7, Dean A Lee8,9,10.
Abstract
OPINION STATEMENT: Natural killer (NK) cells have played a critical-if largely unrecognized or ignored-role in the treatment of B cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) since the introduction of CD20-directed immunotherapy with rituximab as a cornerstone of therapy over 25 years ago. Engagement with NK cells leading to lysis of NHL targets through antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) is a critical component of rituximab's mechanism of action. Despite this important role, the only aspect of B cell NHL therapy that has been adopted as standard therapy that even indirectly augments or restores NK cell function is the introduction of obinutuzumab, a CD20 antibody with enhanced ability to engage with NK cells. However, over the last 5 years, adoptive immunotherapy with effector lymphocytes of B cell NHL has experienced tremendous growth, with five different CAR T cell products now licensed by the FDA, four of which target CD19 and have approved indications for some subtype of B cell NHL-axicabtagene ciloleucel, brexucabtagene autoleucel, lisocabtagene maraleucel, and tisagenlecleucel. These T cell-based immunotherapies essentially mimic the recognition, activation pathway, and cytotoxic machinery of a CD19 antibody engaging NK cells and lymphoma targets. Despite their efficacy, these T cell-based immunotherapies have been difficult to implement because they require 4-6 weeks of manufacture, are costly, and have significant toxicities. This renewed interest in the potential of cellular immunity-and the manufacturing, supply chain, and administration logistics that have been addressed with these new agents-have ignited a new wave of enthusiasm for NK cell-directed therapies in NHL. With high safety profiles and proven anti-lymphoma efficacy, one or more new NK cell-directed modalities are certain to be introduced into the standard toolbox of NHL therapy within the next few years, be it function-enhancing cytokine muteins, multi-domain NK cell engagers, or adoptive therapy with expanded or genetically modified NK cells.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody-dependent direct cytotoxicity; Chimeric antigen receptor; NK cells; Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35258793 PMCID: PMC8930876 DOI: 10.1007/s11864-021-00932-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Treat Options Oncol ISSN: 1534-6277
Fig. 1NK cell recognition of target cells. NK cell effector function is dependent on a balance of activating and inhibitory signals to distinguish between healthy cells (tolerance) and cancer or virally infected cells. The absence of MHC Class I ligand (missing self, observed with HLA downregulation or induced with KIR-ligand mismatch in HLA mismatched recipient/donor pairs) combined with upregulation of stress-induced activating receptor ligands leads to target recognition, NK cell activation, and cytotoxicity. Reproduced with permission from: Cooley S, Parham P, Miller JS. Strategies to activate NK cells to prevent relapse and induce remission following hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Blood. 2018;131(10):1053-62. doi: 10.1182/blood-2017-08-752170.
Published results of adoptive NK cell therapy for lymphoma
| Lymphoma type | NK Cell product | NK Cell source | NK cell dose | Lymphodepleting chemotherapy | Combination therapy | Outcomes | Author | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HL ( | Expanded | Autologous | 6.8 × 108–4 × 1010 NK Cells for 1 dose | None | IL-2 | Not Reported | Lister et al. [ | 1995 |
| B cell NHL ( | Overnight IL-2 Activation | Haploidentical | 2 × 106–40 × 106/kg for 1 dose | Fludarabine, Cyclophosphamide | IL-2 + rituximab | 2 CR, 2 PR | Bachanova et al. [ | 2010 |
| NHL ( | Overnight IL-2 Activation | Haploidentical | 1 × 105–2 × 107/kg for 1 dose | None | Primary endpoint safety, 8/13 in remission | Klingemann et al. [ | 2013 | |
| NHL ( | Expanded | Unrelated healthy donor | 1 × 106–3 × 107/kg for 1–3 doses | None | 8/17 SD | Yang et al. [ | 2016 | |
| NHL ( | Overnight IL-2 Activation | Haploidentical | 0.5–3.27 × 107/kg for 1 dose | Fludarabine, Cyclophosphamide, Methylprednisolone | IL-2 + rituximab | 4/15 ORR, 2/15 CR | Bachanova et al. [ | 2018 |
| NHL ( | Expanded | Autologous | 1 × 106–1 × 107/kg for 1 dose | none | rituximab | 7/9 with CR | Tanaka et al. [ | 2020 |
NK natural killer, HL Hodgkin lymphoma, NHL non-Hodgkin lymphoma, IL-2 interleukin-2, CR complete response, PR partial response, MM multiple myeloma
Clinical trials utilizing adoptive NK cell therapy for lymphoma
| NK Cell Source | Combination Therapy | Disease | Phase | NCT Number | Status | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Umbilical Cord Blood NK Cells | AFM13 | CD30+ HL and NHL | Phase I | NCT04074746 | Recruiting | USA |
| Haploidentical NK Cell Enriched DLI | Haploidentical HSCT | NHL, HL, MM, CLL | Phase I | NCT03524235 | Recruiting | USA |
| Umbilical Cord Blood NK Cells | rituximab, Autologous HSCT | NHL | Phase II | NCT03019640 | Recruiting | USA |
| Universal Donor Expanded NK Cells | ALT803 | HL, NHL, AML, MDS, ALL, CML, CLL, Solid Tumors | Phase I | NCT02890758 | Recruiting | USA |
| Natural Killer Cells (Source Unspecified) | rituximab | B Cell Lymphoma | Phase I/II | NCT02843061 | Completed | China |
| Umbilical Cord Blood NK Cells | Umbilical cord blood HSCT +/- rituximab | HL, NHL AML, ALL, MDS, CML | Phase II | NCT02727803 | Recruiting | USA |
| Haploidentical NK Cells | Autologous HSCT | Lymphoma, Neuroblastoma, Solid Tumors | Phase I | NCT02130869 | Completed | USA |
| Haploidentical NK Cell Enriched DLI | Haploidentical HSCT | Lymphoma, AML, ALL, MDS, Neuroblastoma, Rhabdomyosarcoma | Phase I/II | NCT01386619 | Completed | Germany, Switzerland |
| Donor Derived Expanded NK Cells | Allogeneic HSCT | Lymphoma, Leukemia | Phase I | NCT01287104 | Completed | USA |
| NK-92 Cell Line | NHL, HL, Leukemia, Myeloma | Phase I | NCT00990717 | Completed | Canada | |
| Donor Derived NK Cells | Allogeneic HSCT | Lymphoma, Leukemia, MM, MDS, Brain Tumors, Soid Tumors | Phase I/II | NCT00823524 | Completed | Korea |
| Donor Derived NK Cells | Allogeneic HSCT | NHL, HL, ALL, AML, MDS, CLL, CML, Myeloma | Phase I/II | NCT00789776 | Completed | USA |
| Haploidentical NK Cells | Lymphodepleting chemotherapy and IL-2 | NHL, ALL, AML, MDS, CML, JMML | Phase I | NCT00697671 | Completed | USA |
| Haploidentical NK Cells | Autologous HSCT | Lymphoma, Leukemia, Myeloma | Phase I | NCT00660166 | Completed | USA |
| Haploidentical NK Cells | Lymphodepleting chemotherapy and IL-2 | T Cell LLy, ALL, AML, JMML, MDS | Phase I | NCT00640796 | Completed | USA |
| Haploidentical NK Cell Enriched DLI | Haploidentical HSCT | Lymphoma | Phase I | NCT00586703 | Completed | USA |
| Matched Family Donor NK Cell Enriched DLI | Matched Family Donor HSCT | Lymphoma | Phase I | NCT00586690 | Completed | USA |
| Donor Derived NK or T Cells | Allogeneic HSCT with alemtuzumab | Lymphoma, Leukemia | Phase II | NCT00536978 | Completed | USA |
| Donor Derived NK Cells | Allogeneic HSCT, GM-CSF, rituximab | CD20 + NHL, CLL | Phase I | NCT00383994 | Completed | USA |
| Donor Derived NK Cells | Lymphodepleting chemotherapy, rituximab, IL-2 | CD20 + NHL, CLL | Phase I/II | NCT00625729 | Terminated | USA |
| Umbilical Cord Blood NK cells | Lymphodepleting chemotherapy, Lenalidomide, rituximab | Leukemia, Lymphoma | Phase I | NCT02280525 | Active, Not Recruiting | USA |
| Umbilical Cord Blood NK cells | Umbilical cord blood HSCT +/− rituximab | HL, NHL, ALL, AML, MDS, CML, CLL, Myeloma | Phase I | NCT01619761 | Active, Not Recruiting | USA |
NK natural killer, NCT national clinical trial, HSCT hematopoietic stem cell transplant, HL Hodgkin lymphoma, NHL non-Hodgkin lymphoma, AML acute myelogenous leukemia, MDS myelodysplastic syndrome, ALL acute lymphoblastic leukemia, CML chronic myelogenous leukemia, LLy lymphoblastic lymphoma, JMML juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia, IL-2 interleukin-2, CR complete response, PR partial response, MM multiple myeloma, CLL chronic lymphocytic leukemia, DLI donor lymphocyte infusion, GM-CSF granulocyte-monocyte colony-stimulating factor
Fig. 2Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) structure. CAR constructs typically consist of an extracellular antigen binding domain (single chain variable fragment (scFv)), a transmembrane domain, and an intracellular signaling domain comprised of a stimulatory domain without (first generation) or with one (second generation) or more (third generation) costimulatory domains. Fourth generation CARs include additional elements such as cytokine secretion or inducible suicide genes. Reproduced with permission from: Barth MJ, Chu Y, Hanley PJ, Cairo MS. Immunotherapeutic approaches for the treatment of childhood, adolescent and young adult non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Br J Haematol. 2016;173(4):597-616. doi: 10.1111/bjh.14078.
Fig. 3Clinical responses to CD19 CAR-NK therapy for CD19 positive lymphoid malignancies. Clinical outcomes of 11 patients treated with cord blood derived, IL-15 expressing, CD19 CAR NK Cell with an inducible caspase 9 suicide gene (iC9/CAR.19/IL-15 CB NK cells). The legend denotes partial response (PR), complete response (CR), minimal residual disease (MRD), and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Reproduced with permission from: Liu E, Marin D, Banerjee P, Macapinlac HA, Thompson P, Basar R, et al. Use of CAR-Transduced Natural Killer Cells in CD19-Positive Lymphoid Tumors. N Engl J Med. 2020;382(6):545-53. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1910607.
CAR-NK clinical trials for lymphoma
| Target Antigen | Tumor Type | Type of NK Cell | Phase | NCT Number | Status | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD19 | NHL | Not Listed | Early Phase I | NCT04639739 | Not yet recruiting | China |
| CD19 | ALL, CLL, Mantle Cell and Follicular Lymphoma | NK-92 | Phase I/II | NCT02892695 | Unknown | China |
| CD19 | ALL, NHL, CLL | Cord Blood | Phase I | NCT04796675 | Recruiting | China |
| CD19 | ALL, NHL, CLL | Cord Blood | Phase I/II | NCT03056339 | Recruiting | USA |
| CD19 | ALL, CLL, B Cell Lymphoma | Cord Blood | Phase I | NCT04796688 | Recruiting | China |
| CD19 | B cell lymphoma, Mantle cell and Follicular Lymphoma | Cord Blood | Phase I/II | NCT03579927 | Withdrawn | USA |
| CD19 | B Cell Lymphoma, CLL | iPSC | Phase I | NCT04245722 | Recruiting | USA |
| CD19 | B Cell Lymphoma | Not Listed | Early Phase I | NCT03690310 | Not yet recruiting | China |
| CD19/CD22 | B cell Lymphoma | Not Listed | Early Phase I | NCT03824964 | Unknown | China |
| CD22 | B Cell Lymphoma | Not Listed | Early Phase I | NCT03692767 | Not yet recruiting | China |
| CD7 | AML, T-ALL, T-LLy, NK/T-LLy | NK-92 | Phase I/II | NCT02742727 | Unknown | China |
CAR chimeric antigen receptor, NK natural killer, NCT national clinical trial, NHL non-Hodgkin lymphoma, AML acute myelogenous leukemia, ALL acute lymphoblastic leukemia, LLy lymphoblastic lymphoma, CLL chronic lymphocytic leukemia
Fig. 4Schema for NK cell manufacturing with genetically-engineered feeder cells. Feeder cells were produced by genetic modification of K562 to express costimulatory molecules and membrane-bound cytokines. To expand NK cells ex vivo, unfractionated PBMC are stimulated weekly with irradiated PBMC, inducing rapid proliferation of NK cells and a variable degree of non-specific expansion of T cells. Contaminating T cells may be depleted before or during expansion, and the remaining purified NK cells may be stimulated weekly by the artificial antigen-presenting cells as needed to obtain sufficient numbers. Expanded NK cells may be used directly or cryopreserved for future use. Reproduced with permission from: Denman CJ, Senyukov VV, Somanchi SS et al. (2012), Membrane-Bound IL-21 promotes sustained ex vivo proliferation of human Natural Killer cells. PLoS ONE 7(1): e30264. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030264.
Preclinical studies of human NK therapy for lymphoma
| NK source | Activation and expansion method | Genetically engineered | Engineering method | Combination | Lymphoma subtype | Study stage | Year | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NK-92 | IL-2 | No | N/A | Human BL | Preclinical | 1994 | [ | |
| haNK | N/A | Yes (CD16-158V and erIL2) | Transfection/insertion | rituximab | Human CD20+ lymphoma | Preclinical | 2016 | [ |
| CB | Anti-CD3, IL2, IL7, IL12 | No | No | N/A | Human BL | Preclinical | 2009 | [ |
| hESC | NK differentiation medium (IL15, IL3, IL7, SCF, Flt3L) and irradiated AFT-24 cells | No | No | rituximab | Human BL | Preclinical | 2005 | [ |
| iPSC | N/A | Yes (ADAM17 knockdown) | CRISPR/Cas9 | rituximab | Human BL | Preclinical | 2020 | [ |
| PB | IL12, IL15, IL18 | No | No | rituximab | Human BL | Preclinical | 2017 | [ |
| PB | NAM, IL2, IL15 | No | No | No | Human BL | Preclinical | 2011 | [ |
| PB | irradiated autologous PBMCs | No | No | No | Human BL | Preclinical | 2013, 2013, 2017 | [ |
| PB | irradiated k562-mbIL15-41BBL | No | No | No | Human BL | Preclinical | 2013 | [ |
| CB | irradiated k562-mbIL15-41BBL | No | No | No | Human BL DLBCL | Preclinical | 2017 | [ |
| PB | irradiated k562-mbIL21-41BBL | No | No | No | Human BL | Preclinical | 2012 | [ |
| PB | irradiated k562-mbIL15-41BBL | Yes (anti-CD19 CAR) | mRNA electroporation | No | Human BL | Preclinical | 2012 | [ |
| PB | irradiated k562-mbIL15-41BBL | Yes (anti-CD20 CAR) | mRNA electroporation | No | rituximab sensitive and resistant human BL | Preclinical | 2015 | [ |
| PB | irradiated k562-mbIL15-41BBL | Yes (anti-CD20 CAR) | mRNA electroporation | romidepsin | rituximab sensitive and resistant human BL | Preclinical | 2017 | [ |
| NK-92 | IL2 | Yes (anti-CD19 CAR) | Lentiviral transduction | No | Human BL, DLBCL | Preclinical | 2020 | [ |
| CB | irradiated k562-mbIL21-41BBL | Yes (anti-CD19 CAR-IL15-iC9) | Retroviral transdduction | No | Human BL | Preclinical | 2019 | [ |
| PB | IL12, IL15, IL18 | Yes (anti-CD19 CAR) | N/A | No | Human BL | Preclinical | 2020 | [ |
| iPSC (FT596) | N/A | Yes (anti-CD19 CAR-hnCD16-IL15RF) | N/A | rituximab | Human BL | Preclinical | 2019 | [ |
| PB | irradiated k562-mbIL15-41BBL | No | No | Obinutuzumab | Human BL | Preclinical | 2015 | [ |
| PB | No | No | No | CD19/CD16 BiKE CD19/CD22/CD16 TriKE | Human BL | Preclinical | 2012 | [ |
| PB | No | No | No | 161519 TriKE | Human BL | Preclinical | 2012 | [ |
| PB | No | No | No | CD30/CD16A (AFM13) tandem diabody | Human HL | Preclinical | 2014 | [ |
| PB | No | No | No | rituximab | Human BL FL | Preclinical | 2016 | [ |
| PB | No | No | No | N-820 | Human BL | Preclinical | 2016 | [ |
| PB | irradiated k562-mbIL21-41BBL | No | No | N-820 | rituximab sensitive and resistant human BL | Preclinical | 2020 | [ |
CB cord blood; PB peripheral blood; hESC human embryonic stem cell; SCF stem cell factor; Flt3L Flt3 ligand; iPSC induced pluripotent stem cell; ML memory-like; NAM nicotinamide; iC9 inducible caspase-9; CAR chimeric antigen receptor; hnCD16 high-affinity, non-cleavable CD16; BL Burkitt lymphoma; FL follicular lymphoma; mRNA messenger ribonucleic acid; Ref. references