| Literature DB >> 35422096 |
Theodore W Laetsch1, Shannon L Maude2, Adriana Balduzzi3, Susana Rives4, Henrique Bittencourt5, Michael W Boyer6, Jochen Buechner7, Barbara De Moerloose8, Muna Qayed9, Christine L Phillips10, Michael A Pulsipher11,12, Hidefumi Hiramatsu13, Ranjan Tiwari14, Stephan A Grupp2.
Abstract
Down syndrome-associated acute lymphoblastic leukemia (DS-ALL) patients suffer risk of chemotherapy-associated toxicities and poor outcomes. We evaluated tisagenlecleucel in 16 patients with DS-ALL in two phase 2 trials (ELIANA [NCT02435849], ENSIGN [NCT02228096]) and a phase 3b, managed access protocol (B2001X [NCT03123939]). Patients were 5-22 years old, had a median of two prior lines of therapy (range, 1-4), and four (25%) had prior stem cell transplants. Fourteen of 16 patients (88%) achieved complete remission (CR) or CR with incomplete blood count recovery (CRi); 12 of 14 (86%) with CR/CRi were minimal residual disease-negative. With a median follow-up of 13.2 months (range, 0.5-49.3 months), six patients (43%) relapsed after CR (three, CD19-negative; three, unknown) between 80-721 days post-infusion. Ongoing remissions in nine patients ranged from 6-48 months. Any-grade and grade 3/4 AEs occurred in 16 and 14 patients, respectively; 44% experienced grade 3/4 cytokine release syndrome and 13% experienced grade 3/4 neurological events. Grade 3/4 prolonged cytopenias occurred in 44% of patients. No grade 3/4 infections were observed. Tisagenlecleucel expansion and long-term persistence were consistent with previous reports. Comparable to ALL patients without DS, tisagenlecleucel produced high remission rates, manageable side-effects, and promising long-term outcomes in pediatric/young adult patients with DS-ALL.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35422096 DOI: 10.1038/s41375-022-01550-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leukemia ISSN: 0887-6924 Impact factor: 12.883