Cytokine release syndrome after blinatumomab treatment related to abnormal macrophage activation and ameliorated with cytokine-directed therapy

David T. Teachey(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Susan R. Rheingold(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Shannon L. Maude(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Gerhard Zugmaier(Amgen (Germany)), David M. Barrett(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Alix E. Seif(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Kim E. Nichols(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Erica Suppa(University of Pennsylvania), Michael Kalos(University of Pennsylvania), Robert A. Berg(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Julie C. Fitzgerald(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Richard Aplenc(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Lia Gore(University of Colorado Cancer Center), Stephan A. Grupp(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia)
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Abstract

Blinatumomab is a CD19/CD3-bispecific T-cell receptor-engaging (BiTE) antibody with efficacy in refractory B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Some patients treated with blinatumomab and other T cell-activating therapies develop cytokine release syndrome (CRS). We hypothesized that patients with more severe toxicity may experience abnormal macrophage activation triggered by the release of cytokines by T-cell receptor-activated cytotoxic T cells engaged by BiTE antibodies and leading to hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH). We prospectively monitored a patient during blinatumomab treatment and observed that he developed HLH. He became ill 36 hours into the infusion with fever, respiratory failure, and circulatory collapse. He developed hyperferritinemia, cytopenias, hypofibrinogenemia, and a cytokine profile diagnostic for HLH. The HLH continued to progress after discontinuation of blinatumomab; however, he had rapid improvement after IL-6 receptor-directed therapy with tocilizumab. Patients treated with T cell-activating therapies, including blinatumomab, should be monitored for HLH, and cytokine-directed therapy may be considered in cases of life-threatening CRS. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00103285.


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