Off-the-shelf, steroid-resistant, IL13Rα2-specific CAR T cells for treatment of glioblastoma

Christine E. Brown(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Analiz Rodriguez(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Joycelynne Palmer(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Julie R. Ostberg(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Araceli Naranjo(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Jamie R. Wagner(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Brenda Aguilar(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Renate Starr(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Lihong Weng(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Timothy W. Synold(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Vivi Tran(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Shelley Wang(Sangamo BioSciences (United States)), Andreas Reik(Sangamo BioSciences (United States)), Massimo D’Apuzzo(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Julie A. Ressler(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Yuanyue Zhou(Sangamo BioSciences (United States)), Matthew Mendel(Sangamo BioSciences (United States)), Philip D. Gregory(Sangamo BioSciences (United States)), Michael C. Holmes(Sangamo BioSciences (United States)), Winson W. Tang(Sangamo BioSciences (United States)), Stephen J. Forman(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Michael C. Jensen(Seattle Children's Hospital), Behnam Badie(City Of Hope National Medical Center)
Neuro-Oncology
January 27, 2022
Cited by 140Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Wide-spread application of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy for cancer is limited by the current use of autologous CAR T cells necessitating the manufacture of individualized therapeutic products for each patient. To address this challenge, we have generated an off-the-shelf, allogeneic CAR T cell product for the treatment of glioblastoma (GBM), and present here the feasibility, safety, and therapeutic potential of this approach. METHODS: We generated for clinical use a healthy-donor derived IL13Rα2-targeted CAR+ (IL13-zetakine+) cytolytic T-lymphocyte (CTL) product genetically engineered using zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) to permanently disrupt the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) (GRm13Z40-2) and endow resistance to glucocorticoid treatment. In a phase I safety and feasibility trial we evaluated these allogeneic GRm13Z40-2 T cells in combination with intracranial administration of recombinant human IL-2 (rhIL-2; aldesleukin) in six patients with unresectable recurrent GBM that were maintained on systemic dexamethasone (4-12 mg/day). RESULTS: The GRm13Z40-2 product displayed dexamethasone-resistant effector activity without evidence for in vitro alloreactivity. Intracranial administration of GRm13Z40-2 in four doses of 108 cells over a two-week period with aldesleukin (9 infusions ranging from 2500-5000 IU) was well tolerated, with indications of transient tumor reduction and/or tumor necrosis at the site of T cell infusion in four of the six treated research subjects. Antibody reactivity against GRm13Z40-2 cells was detected in the serum of only one of the four tested subjects. CONCLUSIONS: This first-in-human experience establishes a foundation for future adoptive therapy studies using off-the-shelf, zinc-finger modified, and/or glucocorticoid resistant CAR T cells.


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