Single-center randomized trial of T-reg graft alone vs T-reg graft plus tacrolimus for the prevention of acute GVHD

Cameron S. Bader(Stanford Blood Center), Anna Pavlova(Stanford Blood Center), Robert Lowsky(Stanford Blood Center), Lori Muffly(Stanford Blood Center), Parveen Shiraz(Stanford Blood Center), Sally Arai(Stanford Blood Center), Laura Johnston(Stanford Blood Center), Andrew R. Rezvani(Stanford Blood Center), Wen‐Kai Weng(Stanford Blood Center), David B. Miklos(Stanford Blood Center), Matthew J. Frank(Stanford Blood Center), John Tamaresis(Stanford University), Vaibhav Agrawal(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Sushma Bharadwaj(Palo Alto University), Surbhi Sidana(Stanford Blood Center), Judith A. Shizuru(Stanford Blood Center), Nathaniel B. Fernhoff(Oracle (United States)), Amy Putnam(Oracle (United States)), M. Scott Killian(Oracle (United States)), Bryan J. Xie, Robert S. Negrin(Stanford Blood Center), Everett Meyer(Stanford Blood Center)
Blood Advances
December 13, 2023
Cited by 28Open Access
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Abstract

ABSTRACT: Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is a curative therapy for hematological malignancies for which graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) remains a major complication. The use of donor T-regulatory cells (Tregs) to prevent GVHD appears promising, including in our previous evaluation of an engineered graft product (T-reg graft) consisting of the timed, sequential infusion of CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells and high-purity Tregs followed by conventional T cells. However, whether immunosuppressive prophylaxis can be removed from this protocol remains unclear. We report the results of the first stage of an open-label single-center phase 2 study (NCT01660607) investigating T-reg graft in myeloablative HCT of HLA-matched and 9/10-matched recipients. Twenty-four patients were randomized to receive T-reg graft alone (n = 12) or T-reg graft plus single-agent GVHD prophylaxis (n = 12) to determine whether T-reg graft alone was noninferior in preventing acute GVHD. All patients developed full-donor myeloid chimerism. Patients with T-reg graft alone vs with prophylaxis had incidences of grade 3 to 4 acute GVHD of 58% vs 8% (P = .005) and grade 3 to 4 of 17% vs 0% (P = .149), respectively. The incidence of moderate-to-severe chronic GVHD was 28% in the T-reg graft alone arm vs 0% with prophylaxis (P = .056). Among patients with T-reg graft and prophylaxis, CD4+ T-cell-to-Treg ratios were reduced after transplantation, gene expression profiles showed reduced CD4+ proliferation, and the achievement of full-donor T-cell chimerism was delayed. This study indicates that T-reg graft with single-agent tacrolimus is preferred over T-reg graft alone for the prevention of acute GVHD. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01660607.


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