Seattle Children's Hospital
ORCID: 0000-0002-3966-4985Publishes on Glioma Diagnosis and Treatment, CAR-T cell therapy research, Neuroblastoma Research and Treatments. 198 papers and 4.2k citations.
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) production via nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) inhibition demonstrated that metabolic catastrophe drives the combination-induced cytotoxicity. This study provides a comprehensive single-agent and combinatorial drug screen for DMG and identifies concomitant HDAC and proteasome inhibition as a promising therapeutic strategy that underscores underrecognized metabolic vulnerabilities in DMG.
Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) remains a fatal brainstem tumor demanding innovative therapies. As B7-H3 (CD276) is expressed on central nervous system (CNS) tumors, we designed B7-H3-specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells, confirmed their preclinical efficacy, and opened BrainChild-03 (NCT04185038), a first-in-human phase I trial administering repeated locoregional B7-H3 CAR T cells to children with recurrent/refractory CNS tumors and DIPG. Here, we report the results of the first three evaluable patients with DIPG (including two who enrolled after progression), who received 40 infusions with no dose-limiting toxicities. One patient had sustained clinical and radiographic improvement through 12 months on study. Patients exhibited correlative evidence of local immune activation and persistent cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) B7-H3 CAR T cells. Targeted mass spectrometry of CSF biospecimens revealed modulation of B7-H3 and critical immune analytes (CD14, CD163, CSF-1, CXCL13, and VCAM-1). Our data suggest the feasibility of repeated intracranial B7-H3 CAR T-cell dosing and that intracranial delivery may induce local immune activation. SIGNIFICANCE: This is the first report of repeatedly dosed intracranial B7-H3 CAR T cells for patients with DIPG and includes preliminary tolerability, the detection of CAR T cells in the CSF, CSF cytokine elevations supporting locoregional immune activation, and the feasibility of serial mass spectrometry from both serum and CSF. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1.
Background: Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is a uniformly fatal CNS tumor diagnosed in 300 American children per year. Radiation is the only effective treatment and extends overall survival to a median of 11 months. Due to its location in the brainstem, DIPG cannot be surgically resected. Immunotherapy has the ability to target tumor cells specifically; however, little is known about the tumor microenvironment in DIPGs. We sought to characterize infiltrating immune cells and immunosuppressive factor expression in pediatric low- and high-grade gliomas and DIPG. Methods: Tumor microarrays were stained for infiltrating immune cells. RNA was isolated from snap-frozen tumor tissue and Nanostring analysis performed. DIPG and glioblastoma cells were co-cultured with healthy donor macrophages, T cells, or natural killer (NK) cells, and flow cytometry and cytotoxicity assays performed to characterize the phenotype and function, respectively, of the immune cells. Results: DIPG tumors do not have increased macrophage or T-cell infiltration relative to nontumor control, nor do they overexpress immunosuppressive factors such as programmed death ligand 1 and/or transforming growth factor β1. H3.3-K27M DIPG cells do not repolarize macrophages, but are not effectively targeted by activated allogeneic T cells. NK cells lysed all DIPG cultures. Conclusions: DIPG tumors have neither a highly immunosuppressive nor inflammatory microenvironment. Therefore, major considerations for the development of immunotherapy will be the recruitment, activation, and retention of tumor-specific effector immune cells.
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