scholarly journals In vitro and in vivo model of a novel immunotherapy approach for chronic lymphocytic leukemia by anti-CD23 chimeric antigen receptor

Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 117 (18) ◽  
pp. 4736-4745 ◽  
Author(s):  
Greta Maria Paola Giordano Attianese ◽  
Virna Marin ◽  
Valentina Hoyos ◽  
Barbara Savoldo ◽  
Irene Pizzitola ◽  
...  

Abstract Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is characterized by an accumulation of mature CD19+CD5+CD20dim B lymphocytes that typically express the B-cell activation marker CD23. In the present study, we cloned and expressed in T lymphocytes a novel chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) targeting the CD23 antigen (CD23.CAR). CD23.CAR+ T cells showed specific cytotoxic activity against CD23+ tumor cell lines (average lysis 42%) and primary CD23+ CLL cells (average lysis 58%). This effect was obtained without significant toxicity against normal B lymphocytes, in contrast to CARs targeting CD19 or CD20 antigens, which are also expressed physiologically by normal B lymphocytes. Moreover, CLL-derived CD23.CAR+ T cells released inflammatory cytokines (1445-fold more TNF-β, 20-fold more TNF-α, and 4-fold more IFN-γ). IL-2 was also produced (average release 2681 pg/mL) and sustained the antigen-dependent proliferation of CD23.CAR+ T cells. Redirected T cells were also effective in vivo in a CLL Rag2−/−γc−/− xenograft mouse model. Compared with mice treated with control T cells, the infusion of CD23.CAR+ T cells resulted in a significant delay in the growth of the MEC-1 CLL cell line. These data suggest that CD23.CAR+ T cells represent a selective immunotherapy for the elimination of CD23+ leukemic cells in patients with CLL.

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A124-A124
Author(s):  
Letizia Giardino ◽  
Ryan Gilbreth ◽  
Cui Chen ◽  
Erin Sult ◽  
Noel Monks ◽  
...  

BackgroundChimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T therapy has yielded impressive clinical results in hematological malignancies and it is a promising approach for solid tumor treatment. However, toxicity, including on-target off-tumor antigen binding, is a concern hampering its broader use.MethodsIn selecting a lead CAR-T candidate against the oncofetal antigen glypican 3 (GPC3), we compared CAR bearing a low and high affinity single-chain variable fragment (scFv,) binding to the same epitope and cross-reactive with murine GPC3. We characterized low and high affinity CAR-T cells immunophenotype and effector function in vitro, followed by in vivo efficacy and safety studies in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) xenograft models.ResultsCompared to the high-affinity construct, the low-affinity CAR maintained cytotoxic function but did not show in vivo toxicity. High-affinity CAR-induced toxicity was caused by on-target off-tumor binding, based on the evidence that high-affinity but not low-affinity CAR, were toxic in non-tumor bearing mice and accumulated in organs with low expression of GPC3. To add another layer of safety, we developed a mean to target and eliminate CAR-T cells using anti-TNFα antibody therapy post-CAR-T infusion. This antibody functioned by eliminating early antigen-activated CAR-T cells, but not all CAR-T cells, allowing a margin where the toxic response could be effectively decoupled from anti-tumor efficacy.ConclusionsSelecting a domain with higher off-rate improved the quality of the CAR-T cells by maintaining cytotoxic function while reducing cytokine production and activation upon antigen engagement. By exploring additional traits of the CAR-T cells post-activation, we further identified a mechanism whereby we could use approved therapeutics and apply them as an exogenous kill switch that would eliminate early activated CAR-T following antigen engagement in vivo. By combining the reduced affinity CAR with this exogenous control mechanism, we provide evidence that we can modulate and control CAR-mediated toxicity.Ethics ApprovalAll animal experiments were conducted in a facility accredited by the Association for Assessment of Laboratory Animal Care (AALAC) under Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) guidelines and appropriate animal research approval.


Author(s):  
Kiruthiga Raghunathan ◽  
Brindha Devi P

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia cancer is a deadly one which affects the bone marrow from making it to produce more amounts of white blood cells in the humans. This disease can be treated either by radiation therapy, bone marrow transplantation, chemotherapy, or immunotherapy. In radiation therapy, the ionizing radiation is used toward the tumor cells, but the main drawback is the radiation may affect the normal cells as well. To overcome this drawback, immunotherapy chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) is used. These CAR cells will target only the antigen of the tumor cells and not damage the normal cells in the body. In this therapy, the T-cells are taken either from the patients or a healthy donor and are engineered to express the CARs which are called as CAR-T-cells. When these CAR-T-cells come in contact with the antigen present on the surface of the tumor cells, they will get activated and become toxic to the tumor cells. This new class of therapy is having a great prospect in cancer immunotherapy.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2604-2604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephan A. Grupp ◽  
David L Porter ◽  
David T Teachey ◽  
David M. Barrett ◽  
Anne Chew ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2604 We previously reported on CART19 cells expressing a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) with intracellular activation and costimulatory domains. Infusion of these cells results in 100 to 100,000× in vivo proliferation, tumor lysis syndrome followed by durable antitumor activity, and prolonged persistence in pts with B cell tumors. Here we report that in vivo proliferation of CART19 cells and potent anti-tumor activity is associated with CRS, leading to hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), also termed MAS. We propose that MAS/HLH is a unique biomarker that is associated with and may be required for potent anti-tumor activity. Autologous T cells were lentivirally transduced with a CAR composed of anti-CD19 scFv/4-1BB/CD3-zeta, activated/expanded ex-vivo with anti-CD3/anti-CD28 beads, and then infused into ALL or CLL pts with persistent disease after 2–8 prior treatments. CART19 anti ALL activity was also modeled in a xenograft mouse model with high level of human ALL/human T cell engraftment and simultaneous detection of CAR T cells and ALL using 2-color bioluminescent imaging. We describe updated results of 10 pts who received CART19 cells elsewhere at ASH (Porter, et al), including 9 pts with CLL and 1 pediatric pt with relapsed refractory ALL. 6/9 evaluable pts had a CR or PR, including 4 sustained CRs. While there was no acute infusional toxicity, all responding pts also developed CRS. All had high fevers, as well as grade 3 or 4 hypotension/hypoxia. CRS preceded peak blood expression of CART19 cells, and then increased in intensity until the CART19 cell peak (D10–31 after infusion). The ALL pt experienced the most significant toxicity, with grade 4 hypotension and respiratory failure. Steroid therapy on D6 resulted in no improvement. On D9, noting high levels of TNFa and IL-6 (peak increases above baseline: IFNg at 6040x; IL-6 at 988x; IL-2R at 56x, IL-2 at 163× and TNFa at 17x), we administered TNFa and IL-6 antagonists entanercept and toc. This resulted in resolution of fever and hypotension within 12hr and a rapid wean from ventilator support to room air. These interventions had no apparent impact on CART19 cell expansion or efficacy: peak of CAR T cells (2539 CAR+ cells/uL; 77% of CD3 cells by flow) occurred on D11, and D23 bone marrow showed CR with negative MRD, compared to her initial on-study marrow which showed 65% blasts. Although she had no history of CNS ALL, spinal fluid showed detectable CART19 cells (21 lymphs/mcL; 78% CAR+). At 4mo post infusion, this pt remains in CR, with 17 CART19 cells/uL in the blood and 31% CAR+ CD3 cells in the marrow. Clinical assessment of subsequent responding patients shows all had evidence of MAS/HLH including dramatic elevations of ferritin and histologic evidence of HLH. Peak ferritin levels range from 44,000 to 605,000, preceding and continuing with peak T cell proliferation. Other consistent findings include rapid onset hepatosplenomegaly unrelated to disease and moderate DIC. Subsequently, 3 CLL patients have also been treated with toc, also with prompt and striking resolution of high fevers, hypotension and hypoxia. 1 received toc on D10 and achieved a CR accompanied by CART19 expansion. 1 had rapid resolution of CRS following toc administration on day 9 and follow up for response is too short. A 3rd CLL pt received toc on D3 for early fevers and had no CART-19 proliferation and no response. To model the timing of cytokine blockade, xenografts using bioluminescent primary pediatric ALL were established and then treated with extra cells from the clinical manufacture. The CART19 cells proliferated and resulted in prolonged survival. Cytokine blockade prior to T cell infusion with toc and/or etanercept abrogated disease control with less in vivo proliferation of infused CART19 cells, confirming the result seen in the one pt given early toc (D3). The optimal time and threshold to trigger cytokine blockade is currently being tested in these models. CART19 T cells can produce massive in-vivo expansion, long-term persistence, and anti-tumor efficacy, but can also induce significant CRS with features suggestive of MAS/HLH that responds rapidly to cytokine blockade. Given prior to initiation of significant CART19 proliferation, blockade of TNFa and/or IL-6 may interfere with proliferation and effector function, but if given at a point where cell proliferation is underway, toc may ameliorate the symptoms that we have observed correlate with robust clinical responses. Disclosures: Off Label Use: tocilizumab for cell therapy toxicity. Levine:University of Pennsylvania: financial interest due to intellectual property and patents in the field of cell and gene therapy. Conflict of interest is managed in accordance with University of Pennsylvania policy and oversight Patents & Royalties; TxCell: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Kalos:University of Pennsylvania: Patents & Royalties. June:Novartis: Research Funding, institution owned patents have been licensed by Novartis, institution owned patents have been licensed by Novartis Patents & Royalties.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 3231-3231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jim Qin ◽  
Alex Baturevych ◽  
Sherri Mudri ◽  
Ruth Salmon ◽  
Michael Ports

Abstract Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) drives systemic immune suppression and T cell dysfunction in patients, highlighting an important consideration in this setting for the manufacturing and efficacy of adoptive cell therapies using autologous T cells. In clinical studies, anti-CD19 CAR-T cells produce durable and complete responses in leukemic and some lymphomatous B cell malignancies. While preconditioning with cyclophosphamide (Cy) and fludarabine (Flu) has improved CAR-T responses in CLL patients, reported complete response rates still have been below 50%; additional therapeutic strategies likely will be required. Ibrutinib, an irreversible inhibitor of BTK, has been approved as a frontline treatment option for patients with CLL. The potent off-BTK activity of ibrutinib on ITK and TEC family kinases could affect CAR T cell biology. Recent work highlighted the ability of ibrutinib to restore CLL patient T cell functionality, enhance CAR-T production and potentially improve clinical efficacy. Additional preclinical work demonstrated improved tumor clearance when anti-CD19 CAR T cells were combined with ibrutinib in several murine tumor models. A preclinical evaluation of the combination between the anti-CD19 CAR-T product, JCAR017, and ibrutinib was performed to determine feasibility for clinical use in CLL. JCAR017 is a second generation CAR-T cell product candidate that contains a 41BB costimulatory endo-domain and is currently in phase 1 trials for non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). A series of in vitro studies assessed the functional activity of JCAR017 cells (derived from 3 healthy donors), in combination with ibrutinib (500-0.05nM), across a dose range covering the cMax and cMin. Cytolytic activity was monitored by co-culturing CAR-T cells with ibrutinib-resistant K562 CD19 tumor cells at an effector-to-target ratio of 2.5:1. Ibrutinib, at concentrations tested, did not inhibit the cytolytic function of JCAR017 cells. For cells derived from some donors, addition of ibrutinib appeared to increase % target killing. To address ibrutinib effects on JCAR017 activation, cell surface markers and cytokines were tracked over 4 days following stimulation with irradiated K562 CD19 cells. We observed no significant effect on JCAR017 surface expression of CD25, CD38, CD39, CD95, CD62L, CCR7, or CD45RO, or of EGFRt, a surrogate transduction marker. With addition of ibrutinib, we observed a modest decrease in the percentage of cells expressing CD69, CD107a and PD-1. With 5 and 50nM of ibrutinib, there was a 19.5% (p<0.01) average increase in IFNγ production. At supraphysiological concentrations (500nM) we observed a 20% (p<0.05) decrease in IL-2 production, suggesting ibrutinib at high concentrations may dampen T cell activation. CAR-T cell expansion after repeated antigen stimulation has been shown to be a predictor of in vivo efficacy. JCAR017 cells stimulated every 3-4 days with irradiated target cells in the presence of ibrutinib showed no inhibition of initial growth. However, after 5 rounds of stimulation, JCAR017 + ibrutinib cells from 1 donor had enhanced proliferation compared to control, untreated cells (p<0.05). Interestingly, after 5 rounds of serial stimulation, we observed an increased proportion of CD4+CXCR3+CRTh2- Th1 cells with 500nM ibrutinib treatment compared to control (p<0.01). We assessed the in vivo anti-tumor activity of JCAR017 in combination with ibrutinib using NSG mice injected with 5x105 Nalm6-luciferase cells. After tumor engraftment, a suboptimal dose (5x105) of JCAR017 cells was transferred to mice and ibrutinib (25 mg/kg qd) was administered for the duration of the study. Ibrutinib treatment alone had no effect on tumor burden compared to vehicle treatment. Mice treated with a suboptimal JCAR017 dose + ibrutinib showed decreased tumor burden (p<0.05) and increased median survival from 44 days to >80 days (p<0.001) compared to the group receiving the suboptimal JCAR017 dose + vehicle. Similar effects were seen in replicate studies using JCAR017 cells produced from multiple donors. Ex vivo evaluation for CAR-T quantitation and immunophenotyping was also performed. Taken together, the results suggest that ibrutinib enhances intrinsic JCAR017 activity and may improve outcomes in CLL patients treated with anti-CD19 CAR T therapy, irrespective of BTK mutational status. A Phase 1b study of JCAR017 in combination with ibrutinib for BTKi R/R CLL is planned. Disclosures Qin: Juno Therapeutics: Employment. Baturevych:Juno Therapeutics: Employment. Mudri:Juno Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Salmon:Juno Therapeutics: Employment. Ports:Juno Therapeutics: Employment.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine Mueller ◽  
Nicole Piscopo ◽  
Matthew Forsberg ◽  
Louise Saraspe ◽  
Amritava Das ◽  
...  

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells traditionally harbor viral vectors that encode the CAR transgene in the genome. However, viral vector manufacturing typically is resource intensive, suffers from batch-to-batch variability, and includes several animal components, adding regulatory and supply chain pressures. Here, CAR T cells were generated within nine days using recombinant SpCas9 protein and nucleic acids, without any viral vectors or animal components. In comparison to traditional retroviral CAR T cells, nonviral CRISPR CAR T cells exhibit TRAC-targeted genomic integration of the CAR transgene, higher frequency of gene expression signatures associated with a memory phenotype, low receptor signaling prior to infusion, and potent cytotoxicity against GD2+ neuroblastoma in vitro and in vivo. This proof-of-principle study eliminating viral vectors and animal components during CAR gene transfer could enable more flexible and scalable manufacturing of clinically-relevant, high-quality CAR T cells to treat cancers, including solid tumors.


2021 ◽  
Vol 288 (1947) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory J. Kimmel ◽  
Frederick L. Locke ◽  
Philipp M. Altrock

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy is a remarkably effective immunotherapy that relies on in vivo expansion of engineered CAR T cells, after lymphodepletion (LD) by chemotherapy. The quantitative laws underlying this expansion and subsequent tumour eradication remain unknown. We develop a mathematical model of T cell–tumour cell interactions and demonstrate that expansion can be explained by immune reconstitution dynamics after LD and competition among T cells. CAR T cells rapidly grow and engage tumour cells but experience an emerging growth rate disadvantage compared to normal T cells. Since tumour eradication is deterministically unstable in our model, we define cure as a stochastic event, which, even when likely, can occur at variable times. However, we show that variability in timing is largely determined by patient variability. While cure events impacted by these fluctuations occur early and are narrowly distributed, progression events occur late and are more widely distributed in time. We parameterized our model using population-level CAR T cell and tumour data over time and compare our predictions with progression-free survival rates. We find that therapy could be improved by optimizing the tumour-killing rate and the CAR T cells' ability to adapt, as quantified by their carrying capacity. Our tumour extinction model can be leveraged to examine why therapy works in some patients but not others, and to better understand the interplay of deterministic and stochastic effects on outcomes. For example, our model implies that LD before a second CAR T injection is necessary.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. e000471 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veronika Mancikova ◽  
Helena Peschelova ◽  
Veronika Kozlova ◽  
Aneta Ledererova ◽  
Adriana Ladungova ◽  
...  

BackgroundWhile achieving prolonged remissions in other B cell-derived malignancies, chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells still underperform when injected into patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). We studied the influence of genetics on CLL response to anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy.MethodsFirst, we studied 32 primary CLL samples composed of 26 immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene variable (IGHV)-unmutated (9ATM-mutated, 8TP53-mutated, and 9 without mutations inATM,TP53,NOTCH1orSF3B1) and 6IGHV-mutated samples without mutations in the above-mentioned genes. Then, we mimicked the leukemic microenvironment in the primary cells by ‘2S stimulation’ through interleukin-2 and nuclear factor kappa B. Finally, CRISPR/Cas9-generatedATM-knockout andTP53-knockout clones (four and seven, respectively) from CLL-derived cell lines MEC1 and HG3 were used. All these samples were exposed to CAR T cells. In vivo survival study in NSG mice using HG3 wild-type (WT),ATM-knockout orTP53-knockout cells was also performed.ResultsPrimary unstimulated CLL cells were specifically eliminated after >24 hours of coculture with CAR T cells. ‘2S’ stimulated cells showed increased survival when exposed to CAR T cells compared with unstimulated ones, confirming the positive effect of this stimulation on CLL cells’ in vitro fitness. After 96 hours of coculture, there was no difference in survival among the genetic classes. Finally, CAR T cells were specifically activated in vitro in the presence of target knockout cell lines as shown by the production of interferon-γ when compared with control (CTRL) T cells (p=0.0020), but there was no difference in knockout cells’ survival. In vivo, CAR T cells prolonged the survival of mice injected with WT,TP53-knockout andATM-knockout HG3 tumor cells as compared with CTRL T cells (p=0.0485, 0.0204 and <0.0001, respectively). When compared withATM-knockout,TP53-knockout disease was associated with an earlier time of onset (p<0.0001), higher tumor burden (p=0.0002) and inefficient T-cell engraftment (p=0.0012).ConclusionsWhile in vitro no differences in survival of CLL cells of various genetic backgrounds were observed, CAR T cells showed a different effectiveness at eradicating tumor cells in vivo depending on the driver mutation. Early disease onset, high-tumor burden and inefficient T-cell engraftment, associated withTP53-knockout tumors in our experimental setting, ultimately led to inferior performance of CAR T cells.


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