CD19/CD22 targeting with cotransduced CAR T cells to prevent antigen-negative relapse after CAR T-cell therapy for B-cell ALL

Sara Ghorashian(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Giovanna Lucchini(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Rachael T. Richardson(University College London), Kyvi Nguyen(University College London), Craig Terris(University College London), Aleks Guvenel(University College London), Macarena Oporto Espuelas(University College London), Jenny Yeung(University College London), Danielle Pinner(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Jan Chu(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Lindsey Williams(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Ka-Yuk Ko(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Chloe Walding(Royal London Hospital), Kelly Watts(Royal Manchester Children's Hospital), Sarah Inglott(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Rebecca Thomas(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Christopher Connor(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Stuart Adams(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Emma Gravett(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Kimberly Gilmour(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Alka Lal(Cancer Research UK), Sangeetha Kunaseelan(Cancer Research UK), Bilyana Popova(Cancer Research UK), Andre Lopes(Cancer Research UK), Yenting Ngai(Cancer Research UK), Allan Hackshaw(Cancer Research UK), Evangelia Kokalaki(Autolus (United Kingdom)), Milena Balasch Carulla(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Khushnuma Mullanfiroze(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Arina Lazareva(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Vesna Pavasovic(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Anupama Rao(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Jack Bartram(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Ajay Vora(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Robert Chiesa(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Juliana Silva(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Kanchan Rao(University College London), Denise Bonney(Royal Manchester Children's Hospital), Robert Wynn(Royal Manchester Children's Hospital), Martin Pulé(Autolus (United Kingdom)), Rachael Hough(Royal London Hospital), Persis Amrolia(Great Ormond Street Hospital)
Blood
August 30, 2023
Cited by 73Open Access
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Abstract

ABSTRACT: CD19-negative relapse is a leading cause of treatment failure after chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia. We investigated a CAR T-cell product targeting CD19 and CD22 generated by lentiviral cotransduction with vectors encoding our previously described fast-off rate CD19 CAR (AUTO1) combined with a novel CD22 CAR capable of effective signaling at low antigen density. Twelve patients with advanced B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia were treated (CARPALL [Immunotherapy with CD19/22 CAR Redirected T Cells for High Risk/Relapsed Paediatric CD19+ and/or CD22+ Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia] study, NCT02443831), a third of whom had failed prior licensed CAR therapy. Toxicity was similar to that of AUTO1 alone, with no cases of severe cytokine release syndrome. Of 12 patients, 10 (83%) achieved a measurable residual disease (MRD)-negative complete remission at 2 months after infusion. Of 10 responding patients, 5 had emergence of MRD (n = 2) or relapse (n = 3) with CD19- and CD22-expressing disease associated with loss of CAR T-cell persistence. With a median follow-up of 8.7 months, there were no cases of relapse due to antigen-negative escape. Overall survival was 75% (95% confidence interval [CI], 41%-91%) at 6 and 12 months. The 6- and 12-month event-free survival rates were 75% (95% CI, 41%-91%) and 60% (95% CI, 23%-84%), respectively. These data suggest dual targeting with cotransduction may prevent antigen-negative relapse after CAR T-cell therapy.


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