scholarly journals Clinical Development of a Non-Gene-Edited Allogeneic Bcma-Targeting CAR T-Cell Product in Relapsed or Refractory Multiple Myeloma

Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 27-28
Author(s):  
A. Samer Al-Homsi ◽  
Sebastien Anguille ◽  
Jason Brayer ◽  
Dries Deeren ◽  
Nathalie Meuleman ◽  
...  

Background Autologous CAR T-cell therapy targeting the B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA) has shown impressive objective response rates in patients with advanced multiple myeloma (MM). Clinical grade manufacturing of autologous CAR T-cells has limitations including vein-to-vein delivery time delay and potentially sub-optimal immunological capability of T-cells isolated from patients with advanced disease. Allogeneic CAR T-cell products, whereby cells from healthy third-party donors are used to generate an "off-the-shelf" CAR T-cell product, have the potential to overcome some of these issues. To circumvent the primary potential risk of graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) associated with the use of allogeneic T-cells, abrogation of the T-cell receptor (TCR) expression in the CAR T-cells, via gene editing, is being actively pursued. To avoid the potential safety risks and manufacturing challenges associated with gene editing, the allogeneic CYAD-211 CAR T-cell product exploits short hairpin RNA (shRNA) interference technology to down-regulate TCR expression thus avoiding the risk of life-threatening GvHD. Aim The aim is to generate a BCMA-specific allogeneic CAR T-cell product using a non-gene editing approach and study its activity both in vitro and in vivo. CYAD-211 combines a BCMA-specific CAR with a single optimized shRNA targeting the TCR CD3ζ subunit. Downregulation of CD3ζ impairs the TCR expression on the surface of the donor T-cells, preventing their reactivity with the normal host tissue cells and potential GvHD induction. Maintaining all the elements required for the therapy within a single vector (all-in-one vector) provides some significant manufacturing advantages, as a solitary selection step will isolate cells expressing all the desired traits. Results CYAD-211 cells produce high amounts of interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) during in vitro co-cultures with various BCMA-expressing MM cell lines (i.e., RPMI-8226, OPM-2, U266, and KMS-11). Cytotoxicity experiments confirmed that CYAD-211 efficiently kills MM cell lines in a BCMA-specific manner. The anti-tumor efficacy of CYAD-211 was further confirmed in vivo, in xenograft MM models using the RPMI-8226 and KMS-11 cell lines. Preclinical data also showed no demonstrable evidence of GvHD when CYAD-211 was infused in NSG mice confirming efficient inhibition of TCR-induced activation. Following FDA acceptance of the IND application, IMMUNICY-1, a first-in-human, open-label dose-escalation phase I clinical study evaluating the safety and clinical activity of CYAD-211 for the treatment of relapsed or refractory MM patients to at least two prior MM treatment regimens, is scheduled to begin recruitment. IMMUNICY-1 will evaluate three dose-levels of CYAD-211 (3x107, 1x108 and 3x108 cells/infusion) administered as a single infusion after a non-myeloablative conditioning (cyclophosphamide 300 mg/m²/day and fludarabine 30 mg/m²/day, daily for 3 days) according to a classical Fibonacci 3+3 design. Description of the study design and preliminary safety and clinical data from the first cohort will be presented at ASH 2020. Conclusion CYAD-211 is the first generation of non-gene edited allogeneic CAR T-cell product based on shRNA technology. The IMMUNICY-1 clinical study seeks to provide proof of principle that single shRNA-mediated knockdown can generate fully functional allogeneic CAR T-cells in humans without GvHD-inducing potential. We anticipate that subsequent generations of this technology will incorporate multiple shRNA hairpins within a single vector system. This will enable the production of allogeneic CAR T-cells in which multiple genes of interest are modulated simultaneously thereby providing a platform approach that can underpin the future of this therapeutic modality. Figure 1 Disclosures Al-Homsi: Celyad: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Brayer:Janssen: Consultancy; Bristol-Myers Squibb, WindMIL Therapeutics: Research Funding; Bristol-Myers Squibb, Janssen, Amgen: Speakers Bureau. Nishihori:Novartis: Other: Research support to institution; Karyopharm: Other: Research support to institution. Sotiropoulou:Celyad Oncology: Current Employment. Twyffels:Celyad Oncology: Current Employment. Bolsee:Celyad Oncology: Current Employment. Braun:Celyad Oncology: Current Employment. Lonez:Celyad Oncology: Current Employment. Gilham:Celyad Oncology: Current Employment. Flament:Celyad Oncology: Current Employment. Lehmann:Celyad Oncology: Current Employment.

2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. ii2-ii2
Author(s):  
L Hänsch ◽  
M Peipp ◽  
R Myburgh ◽  
M Silginer ◽  
T Weiss ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Due to the limited success of existing therapies for gliomas, innovative therapeutic options are urgently needed. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy has been successful in patients with hematological malignancies. However, using this treatment against solid tumors such as glioblastomas is more challenging. Here, we generated CAR T cells targeting the transmembrane protein CD317 (BST-2, HM1.24) which is overexpressed in glioma cells and may therefore serve as a novel target antigen for CAR T cell-based immunotherapy. MATERIAL AND METHODS CAR T cells targeting CD317 were generated by lentiviral transduction of human T cells from healthy donors. The anti-glioma activity of CD317-CAR T cells was determined in lysis assays using different glioma target cell lines with varying CD317 expression levels. The efficiency of CD317-CAR T cells to control tumor growth in vivo was evaluated in clinically relevant orthotopic xenograft glioma mouse models. RESULTS We created a second-generation CAR construct targeting CD317 and observed strong anti-glioma activity of CD317-CAR T cells in vitro. Glioma cells with a CRISPR/Cas9-mediated CD317 knockout were resistant to CD317-specific CAR T cells, demonstrating their target antigen-specificity. Since CD317 is also expressed by T cells, transduction with a CD317-directed CAR resulted in fratricide of the transduced T cells. Silencing of CD317 in CAR T cells by integrating a specific shRNA into the CAR vector significantly increased the viability, proliferation and cytotoxic function of the CAR T cells. Importantly, intratumoral treatment with CD317-CAR T cells prolonged the survival and cured a significant fraction of glioma-bearing nude mice. CONCLUSION We demonstrate strong CD317-specific anti-tumor activity of CD317-CAR T cells against various glioma cell lines in vitro and in xenograft glioma models in vivo. These data lay a scientific basis for the subsequent evaluation of this therapeutic strategy in clinical neuro-oncology.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A121-A121
Author(s):  
Nina Chu ◽  
Michael Overstreet ◽  
Ryan Gilbreth ◽  
Lori Clarke ◽  
Christina Gesse ◽  
...  

BackgroundChimeric antigen receptors (CARs) are engineered synthetic receptors that reprogram T cell specificity and function against a given antigen. Autologous CAR-T cell therapy has demonstrated potent efficacy against various hematological malignancies, but has yielded limited success against solid cancers. MEDI7028 is a CAR that targets oncofetal antigen glypican-3 (GPC3), which is expressed in 70–90% of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), but not in normal liver tissue. Transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) secretion is increased in advanced HCC, which creates an immunosuppressive milieu and facilitates cancer progression and poor prognosis. We tested whether the anti-tumor efficacy of a GPC3 CAR-T can be enhanced with the co-expression of dominant-negative TGFβRII (TGFβRIIDN).MethodsPrimary human T cells were lentivirally transduced to express GPC3 CAR both with and without TGFβRIIDN. Western blot and flow cytometry were performed on purified CAR-T cells to assess modulation of pathways and immune phenotypes driven by TGFβ in vitro. A xenograft model of human HCC cell line overexpressing TGFβ in immunodeficient mice was used to investigate the in vivo efficacy of TGFβRIIDN armored and unarmored CAR-T. Tumor infiltrating lymphocyte populations were analyzed by flow cytometry while serum cytokine levels were quantified with ELISA.ResultsArmoring GPC3 CAR-T with TGFβRIIDN nearly abolished phospho-SMAD2/3 expression upon exposure to recombinant human TGFβ in vitro, indicating that the TGFβ signaling axis was successfully blocked by expression of the dominant-negative receptor. Additionally, expression of TGFβRIIDN suppressed TGFβ-driven CD103 upregulation, further demonstrating attenuation of the pathway by this armoring strategy. In vivo, the TGFβRIIDN armored CAR-T achieved superior tumor regression and delayed tumor regrowth compared to the unarmored CAR-T. The armored CAR-T cells infiltrated HCC tumors more abundantly than their unarmored counterparts, and were phenotypically less exhausted and less differentiated. In line with these observations, we detected significantly more interferon gamma (IFNγ) at peak response and decreased alpha-fetoprotein in the serum of mice treated with armored cells compared to mice receiving unarmored CAR-T, demonstrating in vivo functional superiority of TGFβRIIDN armored CAR-T therapy.ConclusionsArmoring GPC3 CAR-T with TGFβRIIDN abrogates the signaling of TGFβ in vitro and enhances the anti-tumor efficacy of GPC3 CAR-T against TGFβ-expressing HCC tumors in vivo, proving TGFβRIIDN to be an effective armoring strategy against TGFβ-expressing solid malignancies in preclinical models.Ethics ApprovalThe study was approved by AstraZeneca’s Ethics Board and Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC).


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A133-A133
Author(s):  
Cheng-Fu Kuo ◽  
Yi-Chiu Kuo ◽  
Miso Park ◽  
Zhen Tong ◽  
Brenda Aguilar ◽  
...  

BackgroundMeditope is a small cyclic peptide that was identified to bind to cetuximab within the Fab region. The meditope binding site can be grafted onto any Fab framework, creating a platform to uniquely and specifically target monoclonal antibodies. Here we demonstrate that the meditope binding site can be grafted onto chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) and utilized to regulate and extend CAR T cell function. We demonstrate that the platform can be used to overcome key barriers to CAR T cell therapy, including T cell exhaustion and antigen escape.MethodsMeditope-enabled CARs (meCARs) were generated by amino acid substitutions to create binding sites for meditope peptide (meP) within the Fab tumor targeting domain of the CAR. meCAR expression was validated by anti-Fc FITC or meP-Alexa 647 probes. In vitro and in vivo assays were performed and compared to standard scFv CAR T cells. For meCAR T cell proliferation and dual-targeting assays, the meditope peptide (meP) was conjugated to recombinant human IL15 fused to the CD215 sushi domain (meP-IL15:sushi) and anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab (meP-rituximab).ResultsWe generated meCAR T cells targeting HER2, CD19 and HER1/3 and demonstrate the selective specific binding of the meditope peptide along with potent meCAR T cell effector function. We next demonstrated the utility of a meP-IL15:sushi for enhancing meCAR T cell proliferation in vitro and in vivo. Proliferation and persistence of meCAR T cells was dose dependent, establishing the ability to regulate CAR T cell expansion using the meditope platform. We also demonstrate the ability to redirect meCAR T cells tumor killing using meP-antibody adaptors. As proof-of-concept, meHER2-CAR T cells were redirected to target CD20+ Raji tumors, establishing the potential of the meditope platform to alter the CAR specificity and overcome tumor heterogeneity.ConclusionsOur studies show the utility of the meCAR platform for overcoming key challenges for CAR T cell therapy by specifically regulating CAR T cell functionality. Specifically, the meP-IL15:sushi enhanced meCAR T cell persistence and proliferation following adoptive transfer in vivo and protects against T cell exhaustion. Further, meP-ritiuximab can redirect meCAR T cells to target CD20-tumors, showing the versatility of this platform to address the tumor antigen escape variants. Future studies are focused on conferring additional ‘add-on’ functionalities to meCAR T cells to potentiate the therapeutic effectiveness of CAR T cell therapy.


BMC Cancer ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lena Andersch ◽  
Josefine Radke ◽  
Anika Klaus ◽  
Silke Schwiebert ◽  
Annika Winkler ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-based T cell therapy is in early clinical trials to target the neuroectodermal tumor, neuroblastoma. No preclinical or clinical efficacy data are available for retinoblastoma to date. Whereas unilateral intraocular retinoblastoma is cured by enucleation of the eye, infiltration of the optic nerve indicates potential diffuse scattering and tumor spread leading to a major therapeutic challenge. CAR-T cell therapy could improve the currently limited therapeutic strategies for metastasized retinoblastoma by simultaneously killing both primary tumor and metastasizing malignant cells and by reducing chemotherapy-related late effects. Methods CD171 and GD2 expression was flow cytometrically analyzed in 11 retinoblastoma cell lines. CD171 expression and T cell infiltration (CD3+) was immunohistochemically assessed in retrospectively collected primary retinoblastomas. The efficacy of CAR-T cells targeting the CD171 and GD2 tumor-associated antigens was preclinically tested against three antigen-expressing retinoblastoma cell lines. CAR-T cell activation and exhaustion were assessed by cytokine release assays and flow cytometric detection of cell surface markers, and killing ability was assessed in cytotoxic assays. CAR constructs harboring different extracellular spacer lengths (short/long) and intracellular co-stimulatory domains (CD28/4-1BB) were compared to select the most potent constructs. Results All retinoblastoma cell lines investigated expressed CD171 and GD2. CD171 was expressed in 15/30 primary retinoblastomas. Retinoblastoma cell encounter strongly activated both CD171-specific and GD2-specific CAR-T cells. Targeting either CD171 or GD2 effectively killed all retinoblastoma cell lines examined. Similar activation and killing ability for either target was achieved by all CAR constructs irrespective of the length of the extracellular spacers and the co-stimulatory domain. Cell lines differentially lost tumor antigen expression upon CAR-T cell encounter, with CD171 being completely lost by all tested cell lines and GD2 further down-regulated in cell lines expressing low GD2 levels before CAR-T cell challenge. Alternating the CAR-T cell target in sequential challenges enhanced retinoblastoma cell killing. Conclusion Both CD171 and GD2 are effective targets on human retinoblastoma cell lines, and CAR-T cell therapy is highly effective against retinoblastoma in vitro. Targeting of two different antigens by sequential CAR-T cell applications enhanced tumor cell killing and preempted tumor antigen loss in preclinical testing.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaojuan Shi ◽  
Daiqun Zhang ◽  
Feng Li ◽  
Zhen Zhang ◽  
Shumin Wang ◽  
...  

AbstractAsparagine-linked (N-linked) glycosylation is ubiquitous and can stabilize immune inhibitory PD-1 protein. Reducing N-linked glycosylation of PD-1 may decrease PD-1 expression and relieve its inhibitory effects on CAR-T cells. Considering that the codon of Asparagine is aac or aat, we wondered if the adenine base editor (ABE), which induces a·t to g·c conversion at specific site, could be used to reduce PD-1 suppression by changing the glycosylated residue in CAR-T cells. Our results showed ABE editing altered the coding sequence of N74 residue of PDCD1 and downregulated PD-1 expression in CAR-T cells. Further analysis showed ABE-edited CAR-T cells had enhanced cytotoxic functions in vitro and in vivo. Our study suggested that the single base editors can be used to augment CAR-T cell therapy.


Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 2776-2776
Author(s):  
Salvatore Fiorenza ◽  
George S. Laszlo ◽  
Tinh-Doan Phi ◽  
Margaret C. Lunn ◽  
Delaney R. Kirchmeier ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: There is increasing interest in targeting CD33 in malignant and non-malignant disorders, but available drugs are ineffective in many patients. As one limitation, therapeutic CD33 antibodies typically recognize the membrane-distal V-set domain. Likewise, currently tested CD33-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells likewise target the V-set domain and have thus far shown limited clinical activity. We have recently demonstrated that binding closer to the cell membrane enhances the effector functions of CD33 antibodies. We therefore raised antibodies against the membrane-proximal C2-set domain of CD33 and identified antibodies that bound CD33 regardless of the presence/absence of the V-set domain ("CD33 PAN antibodies"). Here, we tested their properties as targeting moiety in CD33 PAN CAR T cell constructs, using a clinically validated lentiviral backbone. Methods: To generate CAR T cells, negatively selected CD8 + T cells were transduced with an epHIV7 lentivirus encoding the scFv from a CD33 PAN antibody (clone 1H7 or 9G2) linked to either a short (IgG 4 hinge only), intermediate (hinge plus IgG 4 CH3 domain), or long (hinge plus IgG 4 CH3 domain plus IgG 4 CH2 domain) spacer, the CD28-transmembrane domain, CD3zeta and 4-1BB intracellular signaling domains, and non-functional truncated CD19 (tCD19) as transduction marker. Similar constructs using scFvs from 2 different V-set domain-targeting CD33 antibodies, including hP67.6 (My96; used in gemtuzumab ozogamicin), were generated for comparison. CAR-T cells were sorted, expanded in IL-7 and IL-15, and used in vitro or in vivo against human AML cell lines endogenously expressing CD33 and cell lines engineered to lack CD33 (via CRISPR/Cas9) with/or without forced expression of different CD33 variants. Results: CD33 V-set-directed CAR T cells exerted significantly more cytolytic activity against AML cells expressing an artificial CD33 variant lacking the C2-set domain (CD33 ΔE3-4) than cells expressing full-length CD33 at similar or higher levels, consistent with the notion that CD33 CAR T cell efficacy is enhanced when targeting an epitope that is located closer to the cell membrane. CD33 PAN CAR T cells were highly potent against human AML cells in a strictly CD33-dependent fashion, with constructs containing the short and intermediate-length spacer demonstrating robust cytokine secretion, cell proliferation, and in vitro cytolytic activity, as determined by 51Cr release cytotoxicity assays. When compared to optimized CD33 V-set CAR T cells, optimized CD33 PAN CAR T cells were significantly more potent in cytotoxicity, proliferation, and cytokine production without appreciably increased acquisition of exhaustion markers. In vivo, CD33 PAN CAR T cells extended survival in immunodeficient NOD.SCID. IL2rg -/- (NSG) mice bearing significant leukemic burdens from various cell line-derived xenografts (HL-60, KG1α and MOLM14) with efficient tumor clearance demonstrated in a dose-dependent fashion. Conclusion: Targeting the membrane proximal domain of CD33 enhances the anti-leukemic potency of CAR T cells. Our data provide the rationale for the further development of CD33 PAN CAR T cells toward clinical testing. Disclosures Fiorenza: Link Immunotherapeutics: Consultancy; Bristol Myers Squibb: Research Funding. Godwin: Pfizer: Research Funding; Bristol Myers Squibb: Current Employment, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company. Turtle: Allogene: Consultancy; Amgen: Consultancy; Arsenal Bio: Consultancy; Asher bio: Consultancy; Astrazeneca: Consultancy, Research Funding; Caribou Biosciences: Consultancy, Current holder of individual stocks in a privately-held company; Century Therapeutics: Consultancy, Other; Eureka therapeutics: Current holder of individual stocks in a privately-held company, Other; Juno therapeutics/BMS: Patents & Royalties, Research Funding; Myeloid Therapeutics: Current holder of individual stocks in a privately-held company, Other; Nektar therapeutics: Consultancy, Research Funding; PACT Pharma: Consultancy; Precision Biosciences: Current holder of individual stocks in a privately-held company, Other; T-CURX: Other; TCR2 Therapeutics: Research Funding. Walter: Kite: Consultancy; Janssen: Consultancy; Genentech: Consultancy; BMS: Consultancy; Astellas: Consultancy; Agios: Consultancy; Amphivena: Consultancy, Other: ownership interests; Selvita: Research Funding; Pfizer: Consultancy, Research Funding; Jazz: Research Funding; Macrogenics: Consultancy, Research Funding; Immunogen: Research Funding; Celgene: Consultancy, Research Funding; Aptevo: Consultancy, Research Funding; Amgen: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 1934-1934 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eduardo Huarte ◽  
Roddy S O'Connor ◽  
Melissa Parker ◽  
Taisheng Huang ◽  
Michael C. Milone ◽  
...  

Background: T-cells engineered to express a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR-T-cells) are a promising cancer immunotherapy. Such targeted therapies have shown long-term relapse survival in patients with B cell leukemia and lymphoma. However, cytokine release syndrome (CRS) represents a serious, potentially life-threatening, side effect often associated with CAR-T cells therapy. The Janus kinase (JAK) tyrosine kinase family is pivotal for the downstream signaling of inflammatory cytokines, including interleukins (ILs), interferons (IFNs), and multiple growth factors. CRS manifests as a rapid (hyper)immune reaction driven by excessive inflammatory cytokine release, including IFN-g and IL-6. Itacitinib is a potent, selective JAK1 inhibitor which is being clinically evaluated in several inflammatory diseases. Aims: To evaluate in vitro and in vivo the potential of itacitinib to modulate CRS without impairing CAR-T cell anti-tumor activity. Materials and Methods: In vitro proliferation and cytotoxic activity of T cells and CAR-T cells was measured in the presence of increasing concentrations of itacitinib or tocilizumab (anti-IL-6R). To evaluate itacitinib effects in vivo, we conducted experiments involving adoptive transfer of human CD19-CAR-T-cells in immunodeficient animals (NSG) bearing CD19 expressing NAMALWA human lymphoma cells. The effect of itacitinib on cytokine production was studied on CD19-CAR-T-cells expanded in the presence of itacitinib or tocilizumab. Finally, to study whether itacitinib was able to reduce CRS symptoms in an in vivo setting, naïve mice were stimulated with Concanavalin-A (ConA), a potent T-cell mitogen capable of inducing broad inflammatory cytokine releases and proliferation. Results: In vitro, itacitinib at IC50 relevant concentrations did not significantly inhibit proliferation or anti-tumor killing capacity of human CAR-T-cells. Itacitinib and tocilizumab (anti-IL-6R) demonstrated a similar effect on CAR T-cell cytotoxic activity profile. In vivo, CD19-CAR-T-cells adoptively transferred into CD19+ tumor bearing immunodeficient animals were unaffected by oral itacitinib treatment. In an in vitro model, itacitinib was more effective than tocilizumab in reducing CRS-related cytokines produced by CD19-CAR-T-cells. Furthermore, in the in vivo immune hyperactivity (ConA) model, itacitinib reduced serum levels of CRS-related cytokines in a dose-dependent manner. Conclusion: Itacitinib at IC50 and clinically relevant concentrations did not adversely impair the in vitro or in vivo anti-tumor activity of CAR-T cells. Using CAR-T and T cell in vitro and in vivo systems, we demonstrate that itacitinib significantly reduces CRS-associated cytokines in a dose dependent manner. Together, the data suggest that itacitinib may have potential as a prophylactic agent for the prevention of CAR-T cell induced CRS. Disclosures Huarte: Incyte corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership. Parker:Incyte corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership. Huang:Incyte corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership. Milone:Novartis: Patents & Royalties: patents related to tisagenlecleucel (CTL019) and CART-BCMA; Novartis: Research Funding. Smith:Incyte corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. e000896
Author(s):  
Talia Velasco-Hernandez ◽  
Samanta Romina Zanetti ◽  
Heleia Roca-Ho ◽  
Francisco Gutierrez-Aguera ◽  
Paolo Petazzi ◽  
...  

BackgroundThere are few therapeutic options available for patients with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) relapsing as CD19– either after chemotherapy or CD19-targeted immunotherapies. CD22-chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells represent an attractive addition to CD19-CAR T cell therapy because they will target both CD22+CD19– B-ALL relapses and CD19– preleukemic cells. However, the immune escape mechanisms from CD22-CAR T cells, and the potential contribution of the epitope binding of the anti-CD22 single-chain variable fragment (scFv) remain understudied.MethodsHere, we have developed and comprehensively characterized a novel CD22-CAR (clone hCD22.7) targeting a membrane-distal CD22 epitope and tested its cytotoxic effects against B-ALL cells both in in vitro and in vivo assays.ResultsConformational epitope mapping, cross-blocking, and molecular docking assays revealed that the hCD22.7 scFv is a high-affinity binding antibody which specifically binds to the ESTKDGKVP sequence, located in the Ig-like V-type domain, the most distal domain of CD22. We observed efficient killing of B-ALL cells in vitro, although the kinetics were dependent on the level of CD22 expression. Importantly, we show an efficient in vivo control of patients with B-ALL derived xenografts with diverse aggressiveness, coupled to long-term hCD22.7-CAR T cell persistence. Remaining leukemic cells at sacrifice maintained full expression of CD22, ruling out CAR pressure-mediated antigen loss. Finally, the immunogenicity capacity of this hCD22.7-scFv was very similar to that of other CD22 scFv previously used in adoptive T cell therapy.ConclusionsWe report a novel, high-affinity hCD22.7 scFv which targets a membrane-distal epitope of CD22. 4-1BB-based hCD22.7-CAR T cells efficiently eliminate clinically relevant B- CD22high and CD22low ALL primary samples in vitro and in vivo. Our study supports the clinical translation of this hCD22.7-CAR as either single or tandem CD22–CD19-CAR for both naive and anti-CD19-resistant patients with B-ALL.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 3011-3011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca H Kim ◽  
Gabriela Plesa ◽  
Whitney Gladney ◽  
Irina Kulikovskaya ◽  
Bruce L Levine ◽  
...  

3011 Background: CAR T cells have produced remarkable responses in heme malignancies, but efficacy in solid cancers is limited. Poor in vivo persistence and heterogeneous expression of the CAR target on tumors are potential barriers to the success of CAR T cell therapy. However, even with transient persistence, CAR T cells may elicit a “vaccine” effect by inducing cancer cell death and subsequent release of tumor antigens that could stimulate tumor-specific T cell activity. Methods: 6 pts with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) received repeated 3x per week intravenous (iv) infusions of mRNA-transfected mesothelin-redirected CAR T cells (CARTmeso). Pts with PDAC (n = 5), ovarian carcinoma (n = 5), and mesothelioma (n = 5) received iv infusion of lentiviral-transduced (lenti) CARTmeso with or without cyclophosphamide (Cy) preconditioning. Peripheral blood samples were collected from pts at baseline and defined time points after treatment. Genomic DNA from these samples or from pre-infused CAR T cell product was used for deep sequencing of the TCRbeta chain using the ImmunoSEQ platform. A TCRbeta clone was considered to have expanded from baseline to defined time points after treatment if it showed a two-fold change from baseline and met statistical significance by Fisher’s exact test (p < 0.05). Results: mRNA CARTmeso cells persisted in vivo for < 24 hrs. Unexpectedly, therapy induced clonal T cell expansion detected in the blood by day 14 in all 6 pts. Expanded clones underwent contraction by day 28 in 3 pts. In one pt, peripherally expanded clones were also detected in a tumor biopsy, but without significant intratumoral clonal expansion. Lenti CARTmeso therapy also induced peripheral expansion of T cell clones both present and not present in the infused CAR T cell product. However, with Cy preconditioning, clonal expansion seen after lenti CARTmeso therapy was predominately restricted to clones detected in the CAR T cell product. Conclusions: In pts with advanced solid cancers, CARTmeso stimulates clonal expansion of endogenous T cells, which is lost with Cy conditioning. Findings suggest that CAR T cells may elicit a “vaccine” effect with potential therapeutic implications.


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 3035-3035
Author(s):  
Rebecca Alice Gardner ◽  
Colleen Annesley ◽  
Ashley Wilson ◽  
Corinne Summers ◽  
Prabha Narayanaswamy, ◽  
...  

3035 Background: Loss of CD19 expression is a major cause of limited durable B-ALL remission following CD19 CAR T cells, which might be overcome by utilization of dual CD19xCD22 CAR T cell targeting. Methods: A Phase I trial (NCT03330691) of SCRI-CAR19x22 was developed using dual transduction of lentiviral vectors encoding for either a CD19- or CD22-specific CAR T cell construct, both with 4-1BB co-stimulation. Manufacturing was performed in a closed G-Rex system with IL-7, IL-15 and IL-21. After lymphodepletion, CAR T cells were infused at 1 or 3 X 106 CAR T cells/kg dose levels. Leukemic response and CAR T cell persistence were evaluated by flow cytometry. Results: Products were successfully manufactured in all 28 enrolled subjects with 7.92 average days in culture (range of 7-11 days) and consisted of an average CD8:CD4 ratio of 3.09 (range 0.19 to 8.9). The cellular product CAR composition was 29% CD19, 31% CD22 and 39% CD19 and CD22 targeting. 13 subjects had prior exposure to CD19 or CD22 targeting therapies with diverse expression of CD19 and CD22 on the leukemic blasts. No dose limiting toxicities occurred in the 27 infused subjects. The recommended phase 2 dose is 3 x 106 CAR+ cells/kg. CRS was present in 80% of subjects, with 85% of CRS being grade 2 or less, and a peak grade of 3 (n = 3). Mild neurotoxicity occurred in 38%, with a single grade 3 event. 84.6% obtained a CR, of which 95% were MRD negative. Of the 4 subjects who did not achieved a CR, 2 had a pre-existing CD19 negative population and one had previously received CAR T cells and rejected SCRI-CAR19x22. There have been 4 relapses with varying CD19 and CD22 expression as follows: 1 CD19-CD22-, 1 CD19+CD22+, and 2 CD19-CD22+. The in vivo engraftment of CAR T cells peaked most frequently between day +7 and +14 and was predominated by the CD19 CAR+ T cells. Conclusions: We demonstrate manufacturing feasibility and safety of SCRI-CAR19x22. While initial efficacy is demonstrated, CD22 activity is poor due to limited expansion of the CD22 CAR-containing components and subjects with pre-existing CD19 negative leukemia fared poorly. Development of a revised CD22 CAR that exhibits a reduction tonic signaling is underway, with plans to explore the new construct in the context of a dual-targeting CD19xCD22 CAR T cell product. Clinical trial information: NCT03330691 .


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