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Engineered T Cell Therapies from a Drug Development Viewpoint
Author(s) -
Fang Chen,
Joseph A. Fraietta,
Carl H. June,
Zhongwei Xu,
J. Joseph Melenhorst,
Simon F. Lacey
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.376
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 2096-0026
pISSN - 2095-8099
DOI - 10.1016/j.eng.2018.11.010
Subject(s) - chimeric antigen receptor , magic bullet , disease , cd19 , drug , drug development , drug discovery , biomarker , computational biology , cancer , medicine , antigen , cancer research , bioinformatics , biology , immunology , immunotherapy , pharmacology , genetics
Cancer is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Recent advances in cellular therapy have demonstrated that this platform has the potential to give patients with certain cancers a second chance at life. Unlike chemical compounds and proteins, cells are living, self-replicating drugs that can be engineered to possess exquisite specificity. For example, T cells can be genetically modified to express chimeric antigen receptors (CARs), endowing them with the capacity to recognize and kill tumor cells and form a memory pool that is ready to strike back against persisting malignant cells. Anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CART19s) have demonstrated a remarkable degree of clinical efficacy for certain malignancies. The process of developing CART19 essentially follows the conventional “one gene, one drug, one disease” paradigm derived from Paul Ehrlich’s “magic bullet” concept. With major players within the pharmaceutical industry joining forces to commercialize this new category of “living drugs,” it is useful to use CART19 as an example to examine the similarities and differences in its development, compared with that of a conventional drug. In this way, we can assimilate existing knowledge and identify the most effective approach for advancing similar strategies. This article reviews the use of biomarker-based assays to guide the optimization of CAR constructs, preclinical studies, and the evaluation of clinical efficacy; adverse effects (AEs); and CART19 cellular kinetics. Advanced technologies and computational tools that enable the discovery of optimal targets, novel CAR binding domains, and biomarkers predicting clinical response and AEs are also discussed. We believe that the success of CART19 will lead to the development of other engineered T cell therapies in the same manner that the discovery of arsphenamine initiated the era of synthetic pharmaceuticals.

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