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Toxicity and response after CD19-specific CAR T-cell therapy in pediatric/young adult relapsed/refractory B-ALL
Author(s) -
Kevin J. Curran,
Steven Margossian,
Nancy A. Kernan,
Lewis B. Silverman,
David A. Williams,
Neerav Shukla,
Rachel Kobos,
Christopher J. Forlenza,
Peter G. Steinherz,
Susan E. Prockop,
Farid Boulad,
Barbara Spitzer,
Maria Cancio,
Jaap Jan Boelens,
Andrew L. Kung,
Yasmin Khakoo,
Victoria Szenes,
Jae H. Park,
Craig S. Sauter,
Glenn Heller,
Xiuyan Wang,
Brigitte Sénéchal,
Richard J. O’Reilly,
Isabelle Rivière,
Michel Sadelain,
Renier J. Brentjens
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
blood
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.515
H-Index - 465
eISSN - 1528-0020
pISSN - 0006-4971
DOI - 10.1182/blood.2019001641
Subject(s) - medicine , cyclophosphamide , cytokine release syndrome , toxicity , minimal residual disease , bone marrow , gastroenterology , acute lymphocytic leukemia , refractory (planetary science) , chemotherapy , leukemia , chimeric antigen receptor , cancer , immunotherapy , lymphoblastic leukemia , biology , astrobiology
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have demonstrated clinical benefit in patients with relapsed/refractory (R/R) B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). We undertook a multicenter clinical trial to determine toxicity, feasibility, and response for this therapy. A total of 25 pediatric/young adult patients (age, 1-22.5 years) with R/R B-ALL were treated with 19-28z CAR T cells. Conditioning chemotherapy included high-dose (3 g/m2) cyclophosphamide (HD-Cy) for 17 patients and low-dose (≤1.5 g/m2) cyclophosphamide (LD-Cy) for 8 patients. Fifteen patients had pretreatment minimal residual disease (MRD; <5% blasts in bone marrow), and 10 patients had pretreatment morphologic evidence of disease (≥5% blasts in bone marrow). All toxicities were reversible, including severe cytokine release syndrome in 16% (4 of 25) and severe neurotoxicity in 28% (7 of 25) of patients. Treated patients were assessed for response, and, among the evaluable patients (n = 24), response and peak CAR T-cell expansion were superior in the HD-Cy/MRD cohorts, as compared with the LD-Cy/morphologic cohorts without an increase in toxicity. Our data support the safety of CD19-specific CAR T-cell therapy for R/R B-ALL. Our data also suggest that dose intensity of conditioning chemotherapy and minimal pretreatment disease burden have a positive impact on response without a negative effect on toxicity. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01860937.

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