
Phase I study of chimeric antigen receptor modified T cells in treating HER2-positive advanced biliary tract cancers and pancreatic cancers
Author(s) -
Kang Feng,
Yang Liu,
Yelei Guo,
Jingdan Qiu,
Zhiqiang Wu,
Hanren Dai,
Qingming Yang,
Yao Wang,
Weidong Han
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
protein and cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.973
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1674-8018
pISSN - 1674-800X
DOI - 10.1007/s13238-017-0440-4
Subject(s) - medicine , gastroenterology , adverse effect , chimeric antigen receptor , myalgia , nausea , cancer , immunotherapy
This phase I clinical trial (NCT01935843) is to evaluate the safety, feasibility, and activity of chimeric antigen receptor-engineered T cell (CART) immunotherapy targeting human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) in patients with advanced biliary tract cancers (BTCs) and pancreatic cancers (PCs). Eligible patients with HER2-positive (>50%) BTCs and PCs were enrolled in the trial. Well cultured CART-HER2 cells were infused following the conditioning treatment composed of nab-paclitaxel (100-200 mg/m 2 ) and cyclophosphamide (15-35 mg/kg). CAR transgene copy number in the peripheral blood was serially measured to monitor the expansion and persistence of CART-HER2 cells in vivo. Eleven enrolled patients received 1 to 2-cycle CART-HER2 cell infusion (median CAR + T cell 2.1 × 10 6 /kg). The conditioning treatment resulted in mild-to-moderate fatigue, nausea/vomiting, myalgia/arthralgia, and lymphopenia. Except one grade-3 acute febrile syndrome and one abnormal elevation of transaminase (>9 ULN), adverse events related to the infusion of CART-HER2 cells were mild-to-moderate. Post-infusion toxicities included one case of reversible severe upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage which occurred in a patient with gastric antrum invaded by metastasis 11 days after the CART-HER2 cell infusion, and 2 cases of grade 1-2 delayed fever, accompanied by the release of C-reactive protein and interleukin-6. All patients were evaluable for assessment of clinical response, among which 1 obtained a 4.5-months partial response and 5 achieved stable disease. The median progression free survival was 4.8 months (range, 1.5-8.3 months). Finally, data from this study demonstrated the safety and feasibility of CART-HER2 immunotherapy, and showed encouraging signals of clinical activity.