Trivalent CAR T cells overcome interpatient antigenic variability in glioblastoma

Kevin Bielamowicz(Houston Methodist), Kristen Fousek(Houston Methodist), Tiara T. Byrd(Houston Methodist), Hebatalla Samaha(Houston Methodist), Malini Mukherjee(Baylor College of Medicine), Nikita Aware(Houston Methodist), Meng-Fen Wu(Baylor College of Medicine), Jordan S. Orange(Baylor College of Medicine), Pavel Sumazin(Baylor College of Medicine), Tsz‐Kwong Man(Baylor College of Medicine), Sujith K. Joseph(Houston Methodist), Meenakshi Hegde(Houston Methodist), Nabil Ahmed(Houston Methodist)
Neuro-Oncology
September 15, 2017
Cited by 415Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Background: Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common primary malignant brain cancer, and is currently incurable. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have shown promise in GBM treatment. While we have shown that combinatorial targeting of 2 glioma antigens offsets antigen escape and enhances T-cell effector functions, the interpatient variability in surface antigen expression between patients hinders the clinical impact of targeting 2 antigen pairs. This study addresses targeting 3 antigens using a single CAR T-cell product for broader application. Methods: We analyzed the surface expression of 3 targetable glioma antigens (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 [HER2], interleukin-13 receptor subunit alpha-2 [IL13Rα2], and ephrin-A2 [EphA2]) in 15 primary GBM samples. Accordingly, we created a trivalent T-cell product armed with 3 CAR molecules specific for these validated targets encoded by a single universal (U) tricistronic transgene (UCAR T cells). Results: Our data showed that co-targeting HER2, IL13Rα2, and EphA2 could overcome interpatient variability by a tendency to capture nearly 100% of tumor cells in most tumors tested in this cohort. UCAR T cells made from GBM patients' blood uniformly expressed all 3 CAR molecules with distinct antigen specificity. UCAR T cells mediated robust immune synapses with tumor targets forming more polarized microtubule organizing centers and exhibited improved cytotoxicity and cytokine release over best monospecific and bispecific CAR T cells per patient tumor profile. Lastly, low doses of UCAR T cells controlled established autologous GBM patient derived xenografts (PDXs) and improved survival of treated animals. Conclusion: UCAR T cells can overcome antigenic heterogeneity in GBM and lead to improved treatment outcomes.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis