Generation of clinical-grade CD19-specific CAR-modified CD8+ memory stem cells for the treatment of human B-cell malignancies

Marianna Sabatino(National Institutes of Health Clinical Center), Jinhui Hu(National Institutes of Health), Michele Sommariva(University of Milan), Sanjivan Gautam(National Institutes of Health), Vicki Fellowes(National Institutes of Health), James D. Hocker(National Institutes of Health), Sean C. Dougherty(National Institutes of Health), Haiying Qin(National Institutes of Health), Christopher A. Klebanoff(National Institutes of Health), Terry J. Fry(National Institutes of Health), Ronald E. Gress(National Institutes of Health), James N. Kochenderfer(National Institutes of Health), David F. Stroncek(National Institutes of Health Clinical Center), Yun Ji(National Institutes of Health), Luca Gattinoni(National Institutes of Health)
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Abstract

Long-lived, self-renewing, multipotent T memory stem cells (TSCM) can trigger profound and sustained tumor regression but their rareness poses a major hurdle to their clinical application. Presently, clinically compliant procedures to generate relevant numbers of this T-cell population are undefined. Here, we provide a strategy for deriving large numbers of clinical-grade tumor-redirected TSCM starting from naive precursors. CD8(+)CD62L(+)CD45RA(+) naive T cells enriched by streptamer-based serial-positive selection were activated by CD3/CD28 engagement in the presence of interleukin-7 (IL-7), IL-21, and the glycogen synthase-3β inhibitor TWS119, and genetically engineered to express a CD19-specific chimeric antigen receptor (CD19-CAR). These conditions enabled the generation of CD19-CAR-modified CD8(+) TSCM that were phenotypically, functionally, and transcriptomically equivalent to their naturally occurring counterpart. Compared with CD8(+) T cells generated with clinical protocols currently under investigation, CD19-CAR-modified CD8(+) TSCM exhibited enhanced metabolic fitness and mediated robust, long-lasting antitumor responses against systemic acute lymphoblastic leukemia xenografts. This clinical-grade platform provides the basis for a phase 1 trial evaluating the activity of CD19-CAR-modified CD8(+) TSCM in patients with B-cell malignancies refractory to prior allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.


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