Preclinical targeting of human acute myeloid leukemia and myeloablation using chimeric antigen receptor–modified T cells

Saar Gill(Abramson Cancer Center), Sarah K. Tasian(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Marco Ruella(Abramson Cancer Center), Olga Shestova(Abramson Cancer Center), Yong Li(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), David L. Porter(Abramson Cancer Center), Martin Carroll(Abramson Cancer Center), Gwenn Danet-Desnoyers, John Scholler(Abramson Cancer Center), Stephan A. Grupp(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Carl H. June(Abramson Cancer Center), Michael Kalos(Abramson Cancer Center)
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Abstract

Many patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) are incurable with chemotherapy and may benefit from novel approaches. One such approach involves the transfer of T cells engineered to express chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) for a specific cell-surface antigen. This strategy depends upon preferential expression of the target on tumor cells. To date, the lack of AML-specific surface markers has impeded development of such CAR-based approaches. CD123, the transmembrane α chain of the interleukin-3 receptor, is expressed in the majority of AML cells but is also expressed in many normal hematopoietic cells. Here, we show that CD123 is a good target for AML-directed CAR therapy, because its expression increases over time in vivo even in initially CD123(dim) populations, and that human CD123-redirected T cells (CART123) eradicate primary AML in immunodeficient mice. CART123 also eradicated normal human myelopoiesis, a surprising finding because anti-CD123 antibody-based strategies have been reportedly well tolerated. Because AML is likely preceded by clonal evolution in "preleukemic" hematopoietic stem cells, our observations support CART123 as a viable AML therapy, suggest that CART123-based myeloablation may be used as a novel conditioning regimen for hematopoietic cell transplantation, and raise concerns for the use of CART123 without such a rescue strategy.


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