Allogenic and autologous anti-CD7 CAR-T cell therapies in relapsed or refractory T-cell malignancies

Yinqiang Zhang(Union Hospital), Chenggong Li(Union Hospital), Mengyi Du(Union Hospital), Huiwen Jiang(Union Hospital), Wenjing Luo(Union Hospital), Lu Tang(Union Hospital), Yun Jin Kang(Union Hospital), Jia Xu(Union Hospital), Zhuolin Wu(Union Hospital), Xindi Wang(Union Hospital), Zhongpei Huang(Union Hospital), Yanlei Zhang(Union Hospital), Di Wu, Alex H. Chang(Shanghai Genon Biological Products (China)), Yu Hu(Union Hospital), Heng Mei(Union Hospital)
Blood Cancer Journal
April 24, 2023
Cited by 76Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Chimeric antigen receptor-T (CAR-T) therapy remains to be investigated in T-cell malignancies. CD7 is an ideal target for T-cell malignancies but is also expressed on normal T cells, which may cause CAR-T cell fratricide. Donor-derived anti-CD7 CAR-T cells using endoplasmic reticulum retention have shown efficacy in patients with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Here we launched a phase I trial to explore differences between autologous and allogeneic anti-CD7 CAR-T therapies in T-cell ALL and lymphoma. Ten patients were treated and 5 received autologous CAR-T therapies. No dose-limiting toxicity or neurotoxicity was observed. Grade 1-2 cytokine release syndrome occurred in 7 patients, and grade 3 in 1 patient. Grade 1-2 graft-versus-host diseases were observed in 2 patients. Seven patients had bone marrow infiltration, and 100% of them achieved complete remission with negative minimal residual disease within one month. Two-fifths of patients achieved extramedullary or extranodular remission. The median follow-up was 6 (range, 2.7-14) months and bridging transplantation was not administrated. Patients treated with allogeneic CAR-T cells had higher remission rate, less recurrence and more durable CAR-T survival than those receiving autologous products. Allogeneic CAR-T cells appeared to be a better option for patients with T-cell malignancies.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis