Donor regulatory T-cell therapy to prevent graft-versus-host disease

Everett Meyer(Stanford Blood Center), Anna Pavlova(Meta (United States)), Alejandro Villar‐Prados(Stanford Blood Center), Cameron S. Bader(Stanford Blood Center), Bryan J. Xie(Stanford Blood Center), Lori Muffly(Stanford Blood Center), Paige Kim(Stanford Blood Center), Katherine C. Sutherland(Stanford Blood Center), Sushma Bharadwaj(Palo Alto University), Saurabh Dahiya(Stanford Blood Center), Matthew J. Frank(Stanford Blood Center), Sally Arai(Palo Alto University), Laura Johnston(Stanford Blood Center), David B. Miklos(Stanford Blood Center), Andrew R. Rezvani(Stanford Blood Center), Parveen Shiraz(Stanford Blood Center), Surbhi Sidana(Palo Alto University), Judy Shizuru(Stanford Blood Center), Wen-Kai Weng(Palo Alto University), Vaibhav Agrawal(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Amy Putnam(Meta (United States)), Nathaniel B. Fernhoff(Menlo School), John Tamaresis(Stanford University), Ying Lü(Stanford University), Rahul Pawar(Stanford University), James Scott McClellan(Meta (United States)), Robert Lowsky(Stanford Blood Center), Robert S. Negrin(Stanford Blood Center)
Blood
January 10, 2025
Cited by 33Open Access
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Abstract

ABSTRACT: Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation is a curative therapy limited by graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). In preclinical studies and early-phase clinical studies, enrichment of donor regulatory T cells (Tregs) appears to prevent GVHD and promote healthy immunity. We enrolled 44 patients in an open-label, single-center, phase 2 efficacy study investigating if a precision selected and highly purified Treg therapy manufactured from donor-mobilized peripheral blood improves 1-year GVHD-free relapse-free survival (GRFS) after myeloablative conditioning. We compared this study arm with a concomitant standard-of-care (SOC) cohort. All donor Treg products were successfully manufactured and administered without cryopreservation within 72 hours. Participants had a 1-year incidence of acute grade 3 to 4 GVHD of 7%, moderate to severe chronic GVHD of 11%, and nonrelapse mortality rate of 4.5%. The primary end point of significantly improved 1-year GRFS was achieved at 64% evaluated against a predicted incidence of 40% (P = .002) with a realized incidence of 36% in the SOC comparator. For those trial patients who developed grade 2 to 4 acute GVHD, 91% responded to front-line corticosteroid therapy, whereas 50% responded in the SOC comparator group. Trial participants had a reduced incidence and burden of GVHD and improved GRFS, compared with rates common to highly variable unmanipulated donor grafts and multiagent immune suppression. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01660607.


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