| Literature DB >> 36059523 |
Changju Qu1,2, Rui Zou1,2,3, Peng Wang1,2, Qian Zhu1,2, Liqing Kang4,5, Nana Ping1,2, Fan Xia3, Hailing Liu6, Danqing Kong1,2, Lei Yu4,5, Depei Wu1,2, Zhengming Jin1,2.
Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) therapy has emerged as highly effective in relapsed/refractory (R/R) diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), but only about 40% patients have achieved sustained responses. Here, we conducted a phase II clinical trial testing efficacy and toxicities of CAR-T therapy in R/R non-Hodgkin's lymphoma patients (NCT03196830). Among enrolled patients, 33 R/R DLBCL patients pretreated with DFC (decitabine, fludarabine plus cyclophosphamide) lymphodepletion chemotherapy and infused with tandem CD19-CD22 based CAR-T cells were drawn out for efficacy and toxicities of CAR-T therapy evaluation. With a median follow-up of 10.9(0.6-29.0) months, the best overall response and complete remission (CR) rates were 90.9% and 63.6%, respectively. The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 10.2 months and overall survival (OS) was undefined. The 2-year OS and PFS rates were 54.3% and 47.2%, respectively. No severe grade 4 cytokine release syndrome (CRS) was observed and grade 3 CRS was observed in only 7 patients; 3 patients developed mild immune effect or cell-associated neurotoxic syndrome. All toxicities were transient and reversible and no CAR-T-related mortality. Further subgroup analysis showed that achieving CR was an independent prognostic factor associated with favorable PFS and OS. The 2-year OS and PFS for patients who achieved CR within 3 months (undefined versus undefined P=0.021 and undefined versus undefined P=0.036) or during the follow-up period were significantly longer than those who did not (undefined versus 4.6 months P < 0.0001 and undefined versus 2.0months P<0.001). While severe CRS was also an independent prognostic factor but associated with inferior PFS and OS. The 2-year OS and PFS for patients with grade 3 CRS were significantly shorter than those with grade 0-2 CRS (4.1 months versus undefined P<0.0001 and 1.7 months versus undefined P=0.0002). This study indicated that CD19/CD22 dual-targeted CAR-T therapy under a decitabine-containing lymphodepletion regimen may be a safe, potent effective approach to R/R DLBCL patients.Entities:
Keywords: chimeric antigen receptor T cells; complete remission; decitabine; diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; relapsed/refractory
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36059523 PMCID: PMC9429371 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.969660
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Baseline characteristics of patients.
| Characteristics | n (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (year) | ||
| Median (range), years | 55(31-72) | |
| Gender | ||
| Male | 17(51.5) | |
| Female | 16(48.5) | |
| Primary Diagnose | ||
| GCB | 13(39.4) | |
| Non-GCB | 20(60.6) | |
| Stage | ||
| I/II | 6(18.2) | |
| III/IV | 27(81.8) | |
| Status before leukapheresis | ||
| PR | 11(33.3) | |
| SD | 1(3) | |
| PD | 21(63.7) | |
| Prior lines of therapy before leukapheresis | ||
| 1 | 2(6.1) | |
| 2 | 11(33.3) | |
| 3 | 13(39.4) | |
| 4 | 4(12.1) | |
| >4 | 3(9.1) | |
| Refractory/relapse | ||
| Refractory | 26(78.8) | |
| Relapsed | 7(21.2) | |
GCB for germinal center B cell; PR or partial response; SD for steady disease; PD for progression disease.
Figure 1Flow chart of treatments of the enrolled 33 R/R DLBCL patients. .
Figure 2Clinical efficacy after CAR-T therapy in 33 R/R DLBCL patients. (A) Duration of response and survival post-infusion with CAR-T cells in all patients. (B) Representative PET-CT before CAR-T infusion, 1 month after CAR-T infusion, before HSCT and 3 months after HSCT in patient C10 was shown. The black arrow points to the location of the tumor. .
Figure 3Cytokines and CAR-T copies in 33 R/R DLBCL patients. (A, B) Changes of IL-6 and CRP levels in patients with different CRS grades after CAR-T therapy. Significant higher IL-6 and CRP levels were detected in cases with grade CRS 3 than in that cases with grade CRS 0-2 (P=0.0014 and P=0.0103 respectively two-way ANOVA, shown are means±SD; n1=7, n2=26). (C, D) Changes of IL-6 and CRP levels in patients with different responses after CAR-T therapy. Patients achieving CR during follow-up period has a lower IL-6 increase than patients without achieving CR (P=0.0029, two-way ANOVA, shown are means±SD; n1= 20, n2=13), while CRP had no difference in both groups(P=0.7588, two-way ANOVA, shown are means±SD; n1=20, n2=13). (E, F) Changes of CAR-T copies in patients with different response after CAR-T therapy. Relatively higher CAR-T copies were observed in cases that achieved CR than cases without CR within 1 month(P<0.0001, two-way ANOVA, shown are means±SD; n1=9, n2=24) or 3 months(P<0.0001, two-way ANOVA, shown are means±SD; n1=13, n2=20). Note: CR for complete remission; CRS for cytokine release syndrome; IL-6 for Interferon-6; CRP for c-reactive protein.
Toxicities after CAR-T therapy in all patients.
| Toxicities | n (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Cytokine-release syndrome grade | ||
| 0 | 8(24.2) | |
| 1-2 | 18(54.5) | |
| 3-5 | 7(21.2) | |
| Immune effect or cell associated neurotoxic syndrome | 3(9.0) | |
| Hematological toxicity | ||
| Neutropenia (III/IV) | 33(100) | |
| Anemia (III/IV) | 23(69.7) | |
| Thrombocytopenia (III/IV) | 30(90.9) | |
| Hemagglutination abnormalities(III/IV) | 12(36.4) | |
| Non-neurological and non-hematological toxicity | ||
| Pyrexia | 26(78.8) | |
| Hypoxia | 12(36.4) | |
| Hypotension | 1(3.0) | |
| Cardiac failure | 2(6.0) | |
| Acute kidney injury | 5(15.2) | |
| Ascites/Hydrothorax | 0(0) | |
| Pneumonia | 4(12.1) | |
| Increase of alanine-aminotransferase | 8(24.2) | |
| Increase of Hyperbilirubinemia | 1(3.0) | |
| Tumor lysis syndrome | 0(0.0) | |
Figure 4Survival after CAR-T therapy in R/R DLBCL patients. (A, B) OS and PFS curves of all patients after CAR-T therapy and the 2-year OS and PFS rates were 54.3% and 47.2% respectively (n=33). (C, D) OS and PFS curves of patients in cases who achieved CR within 1 month and those who did not. The 2-year OS and PFS in both groups were undefined and undefined (n1=9, n2=24, P=0.057 and P=0.103 respectively). (E, F) The 2-year OS and PFS curves of patients in cases who achieved CR within 3 months and those who did not. The 2-year OS and PFS in both groups were undefined and undefined (n1=13, n2=20, P=0.021 and P=0.036 respectively). (G, H) The 2-year OS and PFS curves of patients in cases who achieved CR during the follow-up period and those who did not. The 2-year OS and PFS in both groups were undefined versus 4.6 months (n1=20, n2=13, P < 0.0001) and undefined versus 2.0 months (n1=20, n2=13, P<0.001). (I, J) The 2-year OS and PFS curves of patients with grade 3 CRS and those with grade 0-2 CRS. The 2-year OS and PFS in both groups were 4.1 months versus undefined (n1=7, n2=26, P< 0.0001) and 1.7 months versus undefined (n1=7, n2=26, P=0.0002). Note: OS for overall survival; PFS for progression-free survival.