Reinfusion of CD19 CAR T cells for relapse prevention and treatment in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Author:

Myers Regina M.12ORCID,Devine Kaitlin12,Li Yimei34ORCID,Lawrence Sophie1,Leahy Allison Barz12ORCID,Liu Hongyan3,Vernau Lauren1,Callahan Colleen1,Baniewicz Diane1,Kadauke Stephan156ORCID,McGuire Regina1,Wertheim Gerald B.56,Kulikovskaya Irina6ORCID,Gonzalez Vanessa E.6,Fraietta Joseph A.678,DiNofia Amanda M.12,Hunger Stephen P.12ORCID,Rheingold Susan R.12ORCID,Aplenc Richard12,June Carl H.9ORCID,Grupp Stephan A.12ORCID,Wray Lisa12,Maude Shannon L.128ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Division of Oncology, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA

2. 2Department of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

3. 3Department of Biomedical and Health Informatics, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA

4. 4Department of Biostatistics, Epidemiology and Informatics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

5. 5Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA

6. 6Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

7. 7Department of Microbiology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

8. 8Center for Cellular Immunotherapies, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

9. 9Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

Abstract

Abstract Relapse after CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)–modified T cells remains a substantial challenge. Short CAR T-cell persistence contributes to relapse risk, necessitating novel approaches to prolong durability. CAR T-cell reinfusion (CARTr) represents a potential strategy to reduce the risk of or treat relapsed disease after initial CAR T-cell infusion (CARTi). We conducted a retrospective review of reinfusion of murine (CTL019) or humanized (huCART19) anti–CD19/4-1BB CAR T cells across 3 clinical trials or commercial tisagenlecleucel for relapse prevention (peripheral B-cell recovery [BCR] or marrow hematogones ≤6 months after CARTi), minimal residual disease (MRD) or relapse, or nonresponse to CARTi. The primary endpoint was complete response (CR) at day 28 after CARTr, defined as complete remission with B-cell aplasia. Of 262 primary treatments, 81 were followed by ≥1 reinfusion (investigational CTL019, n = 44; huCART19, n = 26; tisagenlecleucel, n = 11), representing 79 patients. Of 63 reinfusions for relapse prevention, 52% achieved CR (BCR, 15/40 [38%]; hematogones, 18/23 [78%]). Lymphodepletion was associated with response to CARTr for BCR (odds ratio [OR], 33.57; P = .015) but not hematogones (OR, 0.30; P = .291). The cumulative incidence of relapse was 29% at 24 months for CR vs 61% for nonresponse to CARTr (P = .259). For MRD/relapse, CR rate to CARTr was 50% (5/10), but 0/8 for nonresponse to CARTi. Toxicity was generally mild, with the only grade ≥3 cytokine release syndrome (n = 6) or neurotoxicity (n = 1) observed in MRD/relapse treatment. Reinfusion of CTL019/tisagenlecleucel or huCART19 is safe, may reduce relapse risk in a subset of patients, and can reinduce remission in CD19+ relapse.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

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