Author:
Meng Fanping,Zhao Jinfang,Tan Anthony Tanoto,Hu Wei,Wang Si-Yu,Jin Jiehua,Wu Juan,Li Yuanyuan,Shi Lei,Fu Jun-Liang,Yu Shuangjie,Shen Yingjuan,Liu Limin,Luan Junqing,Shi Ming,Xie Yunbo,Zhou Chun-Bao,Wong Regina Wanju,Lu-En Wai,Koh Sarene,Bertoletti Antonio,Wang Tingting,Zhang Ji-Yuan,Wang Fu-Sheng
Abstract
Abstract
Background & aims
Immunotherapy with hepatitis B virus (HBV)-specific TCR redirected T (HBV-TCR-T) cells in HBV-related hepatocellular carcinoma (HBV-HCC) patients after liver transplantation was reported to be safe and had potential therapeutic efficacy. We aim to investigate the safety of HBV-TCR-T-cell immunotherapy in advanced HBV-HCC patients who had not met the criteria for liver transplantation.
Methods
We enrolled eight patients with advanced HBV-HCC and adoptively transferred short-lived autologous T cells expressing HBV-specific TCR to perform an open-label, phase 1 dose-escalation study (NCT03899415). The primary endpoint was to evaluate the safety of HBV-TCR-T-cell therapy according to National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (version 4.03) during the dose-escalation process. The secondary endpoint was to assess the efficacy of HBV-TCR-T-cell therapy by evaluating the anti-tumor responses using RECIST criteria (version 1.1) and the overall survival.
Results
Adverse events were observed in two participants among the 8 patients enrolled. Only one patient experienced a Grade 3 liver-related adverse event after receiving a dose of 1 × 105 HBV-TCR-T cells/kg, then normalized without interventions with immunosuppressive agents. Among the patients, one achieved a partial response lasting for 27.7 months. Importantly, most of the patients exhibited a reduction or stabilization of circulating HBsAg and HBV DNA levels after HBV-TCR-T-cell infusion, indicating the on-target effects.
Conclusions
The adoptive transfer of HBV-TCR-T cells into advanced HBV-HCC patients were generally safe and well-tolerated. Observations of clinical efficacy support the continued development and eventual application of this treatment strategy in patients with advanced HBV-related HCC.
Clinical trials registration
This study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03899415).
Funder
National Science and Technology Major Projects
Innovative Research Team in the National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
48 articles.
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