Phase I trial of Claudin 18.2-specific chimeric antigen receptor T cells for advanced gastric and pancreatic adenocarcinoma.

Xianbao Zhan(Second Military Medical University), Bin Wang(Second Military Medical University), Zonghai Li, Jie Li(Second Military Medical University), Huamao Wang, Longpei Chen(Second Military Medical University), Hua Jiang(Renji Hospital), Meihong Wu(Second Military Medical University), Jun Xiao, Xiaobo Peng(Second Military Medical University), Hong Ma, Dan Feng(Second Military Medical University), Dakun Wang, Qiang Fu(Second Military Medical University), Mei Wang(Second Military Medical University), Fengping Shen(Second Military Medical University), Qiang Hao(Second Military Medical University), Linli Zhang(Second Military Medical University), Jing Xu(Second Military Medical University), Yingyi Zhang(Second Military Medical University)
Journal of Clinical Oncology
May 20, 2019
Cited by 106

Abstract

2509 Background: As a promising approach for some cancers, chimeric antigen receptor T cell therapy has limited success in solid tumors. Claudin18.2 (CLDN 18.2) is a stomach-specific isoform of Claudin-18, and highly expressed in gastric and pancreatic adenocarcinoma, the advanced form of both of which have urgent unmet medical needs. We previously developed and demonstrated ability of CLDN 18.2-specific CAR (CAR-CLDN18.2) T cells to eradicate CLDN 18.2-positive gastric cancer xenografts without obvious on-target off-tumor toxicity (Huang J. JNCI 2018). Methods: In this single-arm, open-label, first-in-human phase I pilot study (NCT03159819) to investigate the safety and explore the efficacy of the autologous CAR-CLDN18.2 T cells, patients with confirmed CLDN 18.2 positive advanced gastric or pancreatic adenocarcinoma aged 18 to 70 years received 1 or more cycles of CAR-CLDN18.2 T cell infusion(s) after lymphodepletion pretreatment (fludarabine and cyclophosphamide, with or without nab-paclitaxel) until disease progression or presence of intolerable toxicity. Adverse Event (AE) grade categorization is according to CTCAE 4.0, and tumor response was assessed per RECIST 1.1. Results: As of November 30th, 2018, 12 subjects with metastatic adenocarcinoma (7 gastric and 5 pancreatic) were treated with 1–5 cycles (total of 0.5 - 55 X 10 8 ) of CAR-positive T cells infusions. There were no serious adverse events, treatment-related death or severe neurotoxicity occurred in the study. No grade 4 AEs except for decreased lymphocytes, neutrophils and white blood cells. All cytokine release syndromes observed were grade 1 or 2. Among the 11 evaluable subjects, 1 achieved a complete response (gastric adenocarcinoma), 3 had partial responses (2 gastric adenocarcinomas and 1 pancreatic adenocarcinoma), 5 had stable disease and 2 had progression of disease. The total objective response rate was 33.3%, with median PFS of 130 days estimated using Kaplan-Meier method [95% CI (38, 230)]. Conclusions: This clinical study indicated that CAR-CLDN18.2 T cell therapy were safe and well tolerated and may have promising therapeutic efficacy in patients with advanced gastric and pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Clinical trial information: NCT03159819.


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