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Tumor-intrinsic and -extrinsic determinants of response to blinatumomab in adults with B-ALL
Author(s) -
Yaqi Zhao,
Ibrahim Aldoss,
Chunxu Qu,
Jeremy Chase Crawford,
Zhaohui Gu,
E. Kaitlynn Allen,
Anthony E. Zamora,
Thomas Alexander,
Jeremy Wang,
Hiroaki Goto,
Toshihiko Imamura,
Koshi Akahane,
Guido Marcucci,
Anthony S. Stein,
Ravi Bhatia,
Paul G. Thomas,
Stephen J. Forman,
Charles G. Mullighan,
Kathryn G. Roberts
Publication year - 2020
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.2020006287
Subject(s) - blinatumomab , cd19 , cancer research , immunology , biology , medicine , oncology , antibody
Blinatumomab, a bispecific antibody that directs CD3+ T cells to CD19+ tumor cells, shows variable efficacy in B-progenitor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). To determine tumor-intrinsic and -extrinsic determinants of response, we studied 44 adults with relapsed or refractory B-ALL (including 2 minimal residual disease positive) treated with blinatumomab using bulk tumor and single-cell sequencing. The overall response rate in patients with hematological disease was 55%, with a high response rate in those with CRLF2-rearranged Philadelphia chromosome–like ALL (12 [75%] of 16). Pretreatment samples of responders exhibited a tumor-intrinsic transcriptomic signature of heightened immune response. Multiple mechanisms resulted in loss of CD19 expression, including CD19 mutations, CD19-mutant allele-specific expression, low CD19 RNA expression, and mutations in CD19 signaling complex member CD81. Patients with low hypodiploid ALL were prone to CD19− relapse resulting from aneuploidy-mediated loss of the nonmutated CD19 allele. Increased expression of a CD19 isoform with intraexonic splicing of exon 2, CD19 ex2part, at baseline or during therapy was associated with treatment failure. These analyses demonstrate both tumor-intrinsic and -extrinsic factors influence blinatumomab response. We show that CD19 mutations are commonly detected in CD19− relapse during blinatumomab treatment. Identification of the CD19 ex2part splice variant represents a new biomarker predictive of blinatumomab therapy failure.

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