A phase 1 study of a novel fully human BCMA-targeting CAR (CT103A) in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma

Di Wang(Tongji Hospital), Jue Wang(Tongji Hospital), Jue Wang(Tongji Hospital), Guang Hu(Integrated BioTherapeutics (United States)), Wen Wang(Integrated BioTherapeutics (United States)), Yi Xiao(Tongji Hospital), Haodong Cai(Tongji Hospital), Lijun Jiang(Tongji Hospital), Meng Li(Tongji Hospital), Yongkun Yang(Integrated BioTherapeutics (United States)), Xiaoxi Zhou(Tongji Hospital), Zhenya Hong(Tongji Hospital), Zheng Yao(Integrated BioTherapeutics (United States)), Min Xiao(Tongji Hospital), Liting Chen(Tongji Hospital), Xia Mao(Tongji Hospital), Li Zhu(Tongji Hospital), Jin Wang(Institute of Hematology & Blood Diseases Hospital), Jin Wang(Tongji Hospital), Lugui Qiu(Institute of Hematology & Blood Diseases Hospital), Chunrui Li(Tongji Hospital), Jianfeng Zhou(Tongji Hospital)
Blood
January 21, 2021
Cited by 207Open Access
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Abstract

B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA)-specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies have shown efficacy in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (RRMM). Because the non-human originated antigen-targeting domain may limit clinical efficacy, we developed a fully human BCMA-specific CAR, CT103A, and report its safety and efficacy in a phase 1 trial. Eighteen consecutive patients with RRMM, including 4 with prior murine BCMA CAR exposures, were enrolled. CT103A was administered at 1, 3, and 6 × 106 CAR-positive T cells/kg in the dose-escalation phase, and 1 × 106 CAR-positive T cells/kg in the expansion cohort. The overall response rate was 100%, with 72.2% of the patients achieving complete response or stringent complete response. For the 4 murine BCMA CAR-exposed patients, 3 achieved stringent complete response, and 1 achieved a very good partial response. At 1 year, the progression-free survival rate was 58.3% for all cohorts and 79.1% for the patients without extramedullary myeloma. Hematologic toxicities were the most common adverse events; 70.6% of the patients experienced grade 1 or 2 cytokine release syndromes. No immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome was observed. To the cutoff date, CAR transgenes were detectable in 77.8% of the patients. The median CAR transgene persistence was 307.5 days. Only 1 patient was positive for the anti-drug antibody. Altogether, CT103A is safe and highly active in patients with RRMM and can be developed as a promising therapy for RRMM. Patients who relapsed from prior murine BCMA CAR T-cell therapy may still benefit from CT103A. This trial was registered at http://www.chictr.org.cn as #ChiCTR1800018137.


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