| Literature DB >> 35577500 |
Miriam Alb1, Brigitte Anliker2, Silvia Arcangeli3, Chiara Bonini4,5, Biagio De Angelis6, Rashmi Choudhary7, David Espie8,9, Anne Galy10, Cam Holland11, Zoltán Ivics2, Chahrazade Kantari-Mimoun12, Marie Jose Kersten13, Ulrike Köhl14,15,16, Chantal Kuhn7, Bruno Laugel12, Franco Locatelli6, Ibtissam Marchiq12, Janet Markman7, Marta Angiola Moresco3,4, Emma Morris17, Helene Negre18, Concetta Quintarelli6, Michael Rade19, Kristin Reiche15,19, Matthias Renner2, Eliana Ruggiero5, Carmen Sanges1, Hans Stauss17, Maria Themeli13, Jan Van den Brulle20, Emmanuel Donnadieu8, Maik Luu1, Michael Hudecek1, Monica Casucci21.
Abstract
Despite promising clinical results in a small subset of malignancies, therapies based on engineered chimeric antigen receptor and T-cell receptor T cells are associated with serious adverse events, including cytokine release syndrome and neurotoxicity. These toxicities are sometimes so severe that they significantly hinder the implementation of this therapeutic strategy. For a long time, existing preclinical models failed to predict severe toxicities seen in human clinical trials after engineered T-cell infusion. However, in recent years, there has been a concerted effort to develop models, including humanized mouse models, which can better recapitulate toxicities observed in patients. The Accelerating Development and Improving Access to CAR and TCR-engineered T cell therapy (T2EVOLVE) consortium is a public-private partnership directed at accelerating the preclinical development and increasing access to engineered T-cell therapy for patients with cancer. A key ambition in T2EVOLVE is to design new models and tools with higher predictive value for clinical safety and efficacy, in order to improve and accelerate the selection of lead T-cell products for clinical translation. Herein, we review existing preclinical models that are used to test the safety of engineered T cells. We will also highlight limitations of these models and propose potential measures to improve them. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: immunotherapy
Mesh:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35577500 PMCID: PMC9115021 DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2021-003486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 12.469
Figure 1Overview of the main adverse events associated with engineered T cells. Crosstalk between activated CAR T cells and macrophages provoke an inflammatory reaction that leads to CRS. This inflammatory process can also activate endothelial cells leading to ICANS. Healthy tissue damage is the result of CAR recognizing its target on normal cells (on-target off-tumor). Recognition of an unrelated peptide by engineered TCR or CAR (cross-reactivity) can also lead to healthy tissue damage. Allogeneic CAR T cells have the potential to induce graft-versus-host disease when T cells interact with foreign MHC molecules on host cells. Hematological toxicities can arise from the administration of lymphodepleting regimens. Finally, viral integration is a risk for mutagenesis and T-cell clonal dominance. CAR, chimeric antigen receptor; CRS, cytokine release syndrome; GM-CSF, granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor; ICANS, immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome; IFN-γ, interferon gamma; IL, interleukin; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; TCR, T-cell receptor; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor alpha.
Figure 2Overview of the models and tools used to predict engineered T cell-associated toxicity. Traditional preclinical models, including two-dimensional cell culturing techniques and xenograft models in NSG mice, have failed to predict engineered T cell-associated adverse events observed in the clinic. Recently, animal models that include humanized, transgenic and syngeneic mouse models, as well as primate models, have been proven useful to predict several complications observed in patients after chimeric antigen receptor T-cell infusion. Ex vivo human models such as organoids and organotypical models combined with innovative analytical tools and imaging techniques offer the opportunity to predict, in a personalized manner, some of the toxicities elicited by engineered T cells. GM-CSF, granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor; IFN-γ, interferon gamma; IL, interleukin; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; TCR, T-cell receptor; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor alpha.
Methods and tools used for toxicity assessment of engineered T cells, their advantages, limitations, and potential improvements
| Toxicity assessment | Methods and tools | Advantages | Limitations | Required improvements |
| CRS | Ex vivo coculture models (eg, CAR T cells, tumor cells and macrophages) |
Ease of implementation. Suitable for mechanistic insights. |
Not always correlated with in vivo CRS. Do not recapitulate the in vivo complexity. |
Integration of other cells. Development of human 3D models (organoids, organotypical, organ-on-a-chip). |
| Serum biomarkers from CAR T cell-treated patients. |
Very good correlation of certain biomarkers with future development of severe CRS and neurotoxicity. | Predefined biomarkers | Unbiased multiparametric assessments (longitudinal, spatial, single cells) | |
| Syngeneic models | Mimic the crosstalk between CAR T cells and innate immune cells well |
Use of mouse CAR constructs. Differences between mouse and human T cells (poor persistence of murine T cells). | Improvement of CAR engineering in murine T cells | |
| Immunocompromised SCID-beige mice |
Partly functional innate immune cells. Partially correlated with patient CRS. | Species-specific barriers requiring high amount of human CAR T cells and tumor cells | Model set-up with different tumor types | |
| Humanized NSG/SGM3 mice (reconstituted with human PBMCs or CD34+ cells) | Recapitulate patient CRS and neurotoxicity well |
Complicated and long to set up. Variability in the human reconstitution. High costs. Long engraftment times. Time-consuming. |
Model simplification and standardization. Model set-up with different tumor types. Improved characterization of neurotoxicity. | |
| Primates |
Closely recapitulates patient CRS and neurotoxicity. High predictive value due to similar physiology between human and non-human primate cells. |
Ethical considerations. High costs. Limited cohorts. Non-tumor bearing. | Increased accessibility and dedicated personnel | |
| On-target and off-target off-tumor | NSG mice |
Valuable when the expression of the target antigen is similar between human and murine cells | ||
| Syngeneic models |
Valuable when the expression of the target antigen is similar between human and murine cells. Generation of transgenic mice expressing the target antigen. |
Intrinsic species- specific differences in terms of target expression. Generation of transgenic mice for multiple antigens is a laborious task. |
Improvement of CAR engineering in murine T cells | |
| Humanized NSG/SGM3 mice (reconstituted with human PBMCs or CD34+ cells) | Very valuable when the expression of the target antigen is limited to the hematopoietic compartment |
Laborious High costs. Long engraftment times. Time-consuming. |
Model simplification. Model standardization. Model set-up with different tumor types. | |
| Primate models | High predictive values due to species-specific similarities |
Ethical considerations. High costs. Non-tumor bearing. Limited cohorts. |
Increased accessibility and dedicated personnel | |
| Off-target screening with human cell microarray platform | Can evaluate off-target binding of human CAR T-cell therapy products (whole cells or scFv formats) |
High cost. Need to broaden the protein coverage. | Extension of the technology within the plasma membrane proteome and the secretome | |
| Target antigen expression measurement (via immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining) | Ease of implementation |
Often predefined to certain tissues. Lack sensitivity. Limited to a few markers. |
Functional two-densional and three-dimensional human models (organoid and organotypical) testing the responsiveness of CAR T cells against healthy tissues. Multiplex imaging approaches. | |
| GVHD/rejection | MHC-disparate allogeneic mouse models | Impossible to test human T-cell products | ||
| NSG mice |
Xeno reactions can be used as a surrogate for GVHD with human CAR T cells. Coinfusion of CAR T cells and HLA mismatched PBMCs can be used to determine alloreactivity. |
Not relevant to evaluate the rejection of infused CAR T cells. The need to use PBMCs derived from individuals with several HLA types (classes I and II and minor HLAs) might limit the utility of this in vivo model. | ||
| Humanized NSG/SGM3 mice (reconstituted with human PBMCs or CD34+ cells) |
Recapitulates the reactivity of human CAR T cells against allogeneic CD34+-derived cells. Can be used to study rejection of infused CAR T cells. |
Complicated and long to set up. High costs. Long engraftment times. Time-consuming. | ||
| Mixed lmphocyte reaction | Ease of implementation | Limited guidance on what HLA types (major and minor) on donor PBMCs must be tested in the assay | ||
| TCR cross-reactivity | In vitro screening of TCR T-cell responses against human cell lines expressing diverse HLA alleles | Ease of implementation | ||
| In vitro screening of TCR T-cell responses against mutated cognate peptides | Predicts the peptide residues that are essential for TCR binding well | |||
| Insertional mutagenesis and clonal dominance | In vitro cell-free assays | Ease of implementation in test tube | False positives | |
| Ex vivo | Closer to reality because it assays effects in living cells | Often relies on surrogate cell lines | Perform assay in therapeutically relevant primary cells | |
| In silico approach | Automated application through computer interface | False negatives |
CAR, chimeric antigen receptor; CRS, cytokine release syndrome; GVHD, graft-versus-host disease; scFv, single-chain fragment variable.