Effective bridging therapy can improve CD19 CAR-T outcomes while maintaining safety in patients with large B-cell lymphoma

Claire Roddie(University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Lorna Neill(University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Wendy Osborne(Freeman Hospital), Sunil Iyengar(Royal Marsden Hospital), Eleni Tholouli(Manchester Royal Infirmary), David Irvine(Queen Elizabeth II Hospital), Sridhar Chaganti(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Caroline Besley, Adrian Bloor(The Christie Hospital), Ceri Jones(University Hospital of Wales), Ben Uttenthal(Addenbrooke's Hospital), Rod Johnson(St James's University Hospital), Robin Sanderson(King's College Hospital), Kathleen Cheok(University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Maria A. V. Marzolini(University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), William Townsend(University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Maeve O’Reilly(University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Amy A. Kirkwood(London Cancer), Andrea Kühnl(King's College Hospital)
Blood Advances
February 1, 2023
Cited by 139Open Access
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Abstract

The impact of bridging therapy (BT) on CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CD19CAR-T) outcomes in large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL) is poorly characterized. Current practice is guided through physician preference rather than established evidence. Identification of effective BT modalities and factors predictive of response could improve both CAR-T intention to treat and clinical outcomes. We assessed BT modality and response in 375 adult patients with LBCL in relation to outcomes after axicabtagene ciloleucel (Axi-cel) or tisagenlecleucel (Tisa-cel) administration. The majority of patients received BT with chemotherapy (57%) or radiotherapy (17%). We observed that BT was safe for patients, with minimal morbidity or mortality. We showed that complete or partial response to BT conferred a 42% reduction in disease progression and death after CD19CAR-T therapy. Multivariate analysis identified several factors associated with likelihood of response to BT, including response to last line therapy, the absence of bulky disease, and the use of polatuzumab-containing chemotherapy regimens. Our data suggested that complete or partial response to BT may be more important for Tisa-cel than for Axi-cel, because all patients receiving Tisa-cel with less than partial response to BT experienced frank relapse within 12 months of CD19CAR-T infusion. In summary, BT in LBCL should be carefully planned toward optimal response and disease debulking, to improve patient outcomes associated with CD19CAR-T. Polatuzumab-containing regimens should be strongly considered for all suitable patients, and failure to achieve complete or partial response to BT before Tisa-cel administration may prompt consideration of further lines of BT where possible.


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