| Literature DB >> 36156878 |
Brynn B Duncan1, Cynthia E Dunbar1, Kazusa Ishii2.
Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells have emerged as a promising treatment modality for various hematologic and solid malignancies over the past decade. Animal models remain the cornerstone of pre-clinical evaluation of human CAR-T cell products and are generally required by regulatory agencies prior to clinical translation. However, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of adoptively transferred T cells are dependent on various recipient factors, posing challenges for accurately predicting human engineered T cell behavior in non-human animal models. For example, murine xenograft models did not forecast now well-established cytokine-driven systemic toxicities of CAR-T cells seen in humans, highlighting the limitations of animal models that do not perfectly recapitulate complex human immune systems. Understanding the concordance as well as discrepancies between existing pre-clinical animal data and human clinical experiences, along with established advantages and limitations of each model, will facilitate investigators' ability to appropriately select and design animal models for optimal evaluation of future CAR-T cell products. We summarize the current state of animal models in this field, and the advantages and disadvantages of each approach depending on the pre-clinical questions being asked.Entities:
Keywords: CAR-T cells; animal models; efficacy; pre-clinical development; toxicity; trafficking
Year: 2022 PMID: 36156878 PMCID: PMC9478925 DOI: 10.1016/j.omtm.2022.08.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ther Methods Clin Dev ISSN: 2329-0501 Impact factor: 5.849
Figure 1Murine models for CAR-T therapies
Human cells are depicted in aqua and mouse cells in pink throughout the figure.
A comparison of animal model systems for pre-clinical CAR-T cell testing
| Species | Advantages | Disadvantages | Efficacy | Toxicity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zebrafish | Rapid Visualization of CAR-T-tumor interactions Inexpensive Large study size Low cell numbers | Limited ability for longitudinal studies Genetic distance frm humans No spontaneous tumor development | Unclear utility for toxicity modeling | ||
| Mouse | Xenograft | Rapid Avoid interspecies immune rejection Direct evaluation of human T cell product Broad range of human tumor cell lines available | Longitudinal studies limited by xenogeneic GVHD Lacks spontaneous tumors Immunodeficient | Most CAR-T undergo proof-of-concept efficacy studies in xenografts. Different CAR generations Single, tandem, bicistronic, loop CARs Hematologic, solid tumor targets Gated CARs | Limited reports of toxicity, but some exist |
| Patient-derived xenograft (PDX) | Direct study of clinically relevant heterogeneous tumors Tumor includes human stroma, microenvironment | Work and time intensive Lacks spontaneous tumors Immunodeficient | Advantageous for testing efficacy of dual-target and gated CAR-T cells | Limited toxicity data | |
| Genetically engineered | Spontaneous tumor development More accurate tumor microenvironment | Historically expensive, time intensive Limited control over timing of tumor development | No CAR-T studies published to date | ||
| Humanized | Direct evaluation of human T cell product Modeling of human CAR-T in the presence of human immune and hematopoietic cells | Lacks human stroma The human immune systems established in mice are incomplete | Important for modeling efficacy in the face of other human immune cells and tissues | Allows study of the role other cell types play in toxicity | |
| Syngeneic | Immune competent No xenogeneic GVHD Ideal for longitudinal studies | Unable to directly evaluate human T cell product Murine and human biology are different | Critical for understanding role of lymphodepletion on CAR-T efficacy | On-target off-tumor toxicity may not directly apply to humans | |
| Transgenic | Direct evaluation of CAR transduced in murine T cells directed against human antigen expressed on murine tumor and healthy cells Immune competent | Transgenic mouse strains are available for a limited number of target antigens | Evaluation of human CAR construct in otherwise all murine system | Ideal for modeling on-target off-tumor toxicity | |
| Dog | Intraspecies genetic heterogeneity Spontaneous tumors Shortened lifespan, rapid translation | Less established than other model systems Limited lab/specialist availability | Preliminary efficacy with similar escape mechanisms in humans | No published CAR-T studies of toxicity | |
| Non-human primate | Genetically similar to humans Immune competent Ability for longitudinal CAR-T studies, target dependent | Expensive Small study numbers Lack of relevant tumor models | Efficacy in infectious disease models and anti-B cell antigen CAR-T (B cell aplasia) | Ideal for modeling cytokine-mediated cytotoxicity (CRS, ICANS) | |
Figure 2Non-murine models for CAR-T cell therapies
Figure 3Modeling cytokine-mediated CAR-T cell toxicities
The mechanism of CAR-T-mediated cytokine-related toxicities involves a surge of T cell activation, resulting in release of cytokines, which in turn results in myeloid cell release of other pro-inflammatory cytokines. CAR-T-mediated lysis and induction of tumor cell apoptosis further feeds the cycle of pro-inflammatory cytokine production. Limitations of the xenograft mice for modeling toxicity stem from lack of interspecies cytokine cross-reactivity and inadequate host immune functions, although CRS and neurotoxicity have been successfully modeled in humanized mice. Both CRS and HLH have been successfully modeled in syngeneic or transgenic immunocompetent mouse models. Similarly, neurotoxicity and CRS modeling in NHPs has mimicked human toxicities and provided valuable insight into toxicity mechanisms.