Anti-CD19 CAR T cells can induce remissions in many patients. Yet, relapses can occur and so some patients may proceed to HCT either prior to or after relapse to try… Click to show full abstract
Anti-CD19 CAR T cells can induce remissions in many patients. Yet, relapses can occur and so some patients may proceed to HCT either prior to or after relapse to try to achieve long-term cure. Even so, relapse limits the success of HCT. We recently showed that the suppressive mechanisms induced immediately after PTCy prevent new donor T cells from causing GVHD. Thus, we hypothesized that donor anti-CD19 CAR T cells given early after PTCy would not cause GVHD but may retain an anti-tumor effect; the premise is that the CAR T cells would induce an initial deep remission, while the polyclonal graft-versus-tumor (GVT) T-cell response would ensure long-term cure. To test this approach, we modified our T-cell-replete murine MHC-haploidentical HCT model (B6C3F1→B6D2F1) by giving 1 × 106 E2a-PBx leukemia cells 7 days prior to lethal irradiation and HCT [Figure 1A]. Importantly, E2a-PBx, as a pre-B-cell ALL cell line on a B6 background, is syngeneic with host and donor; thus, in this model only anti-CD19 CAR T cells can treat the leukemia (there is no allo response against it). T-cell-enriched B6C3F1 donor splenocytes were stimulated with anti-CD3/CD28 beads, transduced with an anti-CD19 CAR vector with a CD28 costimulatory domain, and infused at 1 × 106 transduced T cells per mouse on day +5 (24 hours after PTCy). Mice receiving leukemia, HCT, and PTCy all died of leukemia when receiving non-transduced in vitro expanded T cells, but cleared leukemia when receiving CAR T cells [Figure 2A]; this effect occurred without clinical or histopathologic GVHD or toxicity. Leukemia relapse did occur in some CAR-treated mice and was more frequent in mice treated with PTCy (∼25% of mice). Relapse events after PTCy were associated with CD19+ extramedullary tumors but partial loss of CD19 in hematopoietic organs. Measurable CAR T cells were found but had increased expression of co-inhibitory molecules, suggesting that CAR T-cell exhaustion and leukemia antigen loss may be two mechanisms of escape. Attempts to assess the impact of having both CAR and allogeneic T cells able to treat the leukemia (to mirror the intended clinical use) in a C3H→B6D2F1 HCT model were limited by permanent clearance of leukemia by the allogeneic response alone. We also explored the impact of PTCy on GVT immunity by giving CAR T cells on day 0 prior to PTCy [Figure 1B]; leukemia was cleared by mice despite PTCy and did not relapse [Figure 2B]. CAR T cells persisted after PTCy and actually increased in numbers in the bone marrow from days +3 to +7. There was no increase of GVHD in CAR-treated mice clinically or histopathologically. Our data suggest that CAR T cells can be safely and effectively administered either prior to or after PTCy, permitting an anti-tumor response without GVHD. Furthermore, these studies show that tumor-specific T cells survive PTCy, consistent with our recent findings that alloreactive T cells persist after PTCy.
               
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