Claudin18.2-specific CAR T cells in gastrointestinal cancers: phase 1 trial interim results

Changsong Qi(Peking University), Jifang Gong(Peking University), Jian Li(Peking University), Dan Liu(Peking University), Yanru Qin(First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University), Sai Ge(Peking University), Miao Zhang(Peking University), Zhi Peng(Peking University), Jun Zhou(Peking University), Yanshuo Cao(Peking University), Xiaotian Zhang(Peking University), Zhihao Lü(Peking University), Ming Lu(Peking University), Jiajia Yuan(Peking University), Zhenghang Wang(Peking University), Yakun Wang(Peking University), Xiaohui Peng(Regend Therapeutics (China)), Huiping Gao(Regend Therapeutics (China)), Zhen Liu(Regend Therapeutics (China)), Huamao Wang(Regend Therapeutics (China)), Daijing Yuan(Regend Therapeutics (China)), Jun Xiao(Regend Therapeutics (China)), Hong Ma(Regend Therapeutics (China)), Wei Wang(Regend Therapeutics (China)), Zonghai Li(Regend Therapeutics (China)), Lin Shen(Peking University)
Nature Medicine
May 9, 2022
Cited by 566Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Despite success in hematologic malignancies, the treatment landscape of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy for solid tumors remains limited. Claudin18.2 (CLDN18.2)-redirected CAR T cells showed promising efficacy against gastric cancer (GC) in a preclinical study. Here we report the interim analysis results of an ongoing, open-label, single-arm, phase 1 clinical trial of CLDN18.2-targeted CAR T cells (CT041) in patients with previously treated, CLDN18.2-positive digestive system cancers ( NCT03874897 ). The primary objective was safety after CT041 infusion; secondary objectives included CT041 efficacy, pharmacokinetics and immunogenicity. We treated 37 patients with one of three CT041 doses: 2.5 × 10 8 , 3.75 × 10 8 or 5.0 × 10 8 cells. All patients experienced a grade 3 or higher hematologic toxicity. Grade 1 or 2 cytokine release syndrome (CRS) occurred in 94.6% of patients. No grade 3 or higher CRS or neurotoxicities, treatment-related deaths or dose-limiting toxicities were reported. The overall response rate (ORR) and disease control rate (DCR) reached 48.6% and 73.0%, respectively. The 6-month duration of response rate was 44.8%. In patients with GC, the ORR and DCR reached 57.1% and 75.0%, respectively, and the 6-month overall survival rate was 81.2%. These initial results suggest that CT041 has promising efficacy with an acceptable safety profile in patients with heavily pretreated, CLDN18.2-positive digestive system cancers, particularly in those with GC.


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