Impact of prior CAR T-cell therapy on mosunetuzumab efficacy in patients with relapsed or refractory B-cell lymphomas

Elise A. Chong(UPMC Hillman Cancer Center), Elicia Penuel, Ellen Napier(University of Pennsylvania), Rachel K Lundberg(University of Pennsylvania), Lihua E. Budde(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Mazyar Shadman(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Matthew J. Matasar(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey), Nancy L. Bartlett(Washington University in St. Louis), Ian W. Flinn(Tennessee Oncology), Francesc Bosch(Vall d'Hebron Hospital Universitari), Keith Fay(Royal North Shore Hospital), André Goy(Hackensack University Medical Center), Anita Kumar(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Loretta J. Nastoupil(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Michael C. Wei, Mei Wu, Shen Yin, Joseph A. Fraietta(Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy), Emeline R. Chong(University of Pennsylvania), Stephen J. Schuster(UPMC Hillman Cancer Center)
Blood Advances
November 21, 2024
Cited by 10Open Access
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Abstract

ABSTRACT: Mosunetuzumab and other CD20/CD3 bispecific antibodies (BsAbs) have efficacy in B-cell lymphomas relapsing after or refractory to CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-modified T cells (CAR-T). The optimal timing of BsAbs and biomarkers of BsAb response after CAR-T are unknown. We addressed these questions using clinical data and blood samples from patients previously treated with CAR-T and subsequently treated on a phase 1/2 study of mosunetuzumab. Thirty patients had paired samples at baseline and after 1 cycle of mosunetuzumab. The median time from CAR-T to mosunetuzumab was significantly longer for responding than for nonresponding patients (P = .006, unadjusted for multiple comparisons). Most patients (20/30) did not receive intervening therapy between CAR-T administration and mosunetuzumab. The remainder of patients received 1 intervening therapy after a protocol-mandated drug washout. After mosunetuzumab, responding patients had higher lymphocytes (995 vs 400 cells per μL; P = .02) and greater increases in CD4 and CD8 cells (median change, 73 vs -90 cells per μL [P = .005] and 243 vs -103 cells per μL [P = .004], respectively). Additionally, responding patients had an increase in activated CD8 cells (median fold change, 1.7; P = .02). Nonresponders had a relative decrease in CAR transgene levels (n = 16; P = .04). This is, to our knowledge, the first study to assess changes in lymphocytes, T cells, and CAR transgene levels in patients treated with BsAbs after CAR-T. These findings suggest an interaction between prior CAR-T and BsAb outcomes and have implications for optimal timing of BsAb after CAR-T. The trial was registered at www.ClinicalTrials.gov as #NCT02500407.


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