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Safety and efficacy of a novel anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T cell product targeting a membrane-proximal domain of CD19 with fast on- and off-rates against non-Hodgkin lymphoma: a first-in-human study

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Authors

Zhang, Yunlin; Patel, Ruchi P.; Kim, Ki Hyun; Cho, Hyungwoo; Jo, Jae-Cheol; Jeong, Seong Hyun; Oh, Sung Yong; Choi, Yoon Seok; Kim, Sung Hyun; Lee, Ji Hyun; Angelos, Mathew; Guruprasad, Puneeth; Cohen, Ivan; Ugwuanyi, Ositadimma; Lee, Yong Gu; Pajarillo, Raymone; Cho, Jong Hyun; Carturan, Alberto; Paruzzo, Luca; Ghilardi, Guido; Wang, Michael; Kim, Soohwan; Kim, Sung-Min; Lee, Hyun-Jong; Park, Ji-Ho; Cui, Leiguang; Lee, Tae Bum; Hwang, In-Sik; Lee, Young-Ha; Lee, Yong-Jun; Porazzi, Patrizia; Liu, Dongfang; Lee, Yoon; Kim, Jong-Hoon; Lee, Jong-Seo; Yoon, Dok Hyun; Chung, Junho; Ruella, Marco

Issue Date
2023-12-09
Publisher
BMC
Citation
Molecular Cancer, Vol.22(1):200
Keywords
CD19CAR T cellsResistanceCD19 mutationsEpitope maskingLymphomaLeukemiaLow avidityFast on- and off-rateMembrane-proximal epitope
Abstract
Background
Commercial anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapies (CART19) are efficacious against advanced B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL); however, most patients ultimately relapse. Several mechanisms contribute to this failure, including CD19-negative escape and CAR T dysfunction. All four commercial CART19 products utilize the FMC63 single-chain variable fragment (scFv) specific to a CD19 membrane-distal epitope and characterized by slow association (on) and dissociation (off) rates. We hypothesized that a novel anti-CD19 scFv that engages an alternative CD19 membrane-proximal epitope independent of FMC63 and that is characterized by faster on- and off-rates could mitigate CART19 failure and improve clinical efficacy.

Methods
We developed an autologous CART19 product with 4-1BB co-stimulation using a novel humanized chicken antibody (h1218). This antibody is specific to a membrane-proximal CD19 epitope and harbors faster on/off rates compared to FMC63. We tested h1218-CART19 in vitro and in vivo using FMC63-CART19-resistant models. We conducted a first-in-human multi-center phase I clinical trial to test AT101 (clinical-grade h1218-CART19) in patients with relapsed or refractory (r/r) NHL.

Results
Preclinically, h1218- but not FMC63-CART19 were able to effectively eradicate lymphomas expressing CD19 point mutations (L174V and R163L) or co-expressing FMC63-CAR19 as found in patients relapsing after FMC63-CART19. Furthermore, h1218-CART19 exhibited enhanced killing of B-cell malignancies in vitro and in vivo compared with FMC63-CART19. Mechanistically, we found that h1218-CART19 had reduced activation-induced cell death (AICD) and enhanced expansion compared to FMC63-CART19 owing to faster on- and off-rates. Based on these preclinical results, we performed a phase I dose-escalation trial, testing three dose levels (DL) of AT101 (the GMP version of h1218) using a 3 + 3 design. In 12 treated patients (7 DLBCL, 3 FL, 1 MCL, and 1 MZL), AT101 showed a promising safety profile with 8.3% grade 3 CRS (n = 1) and 8.3% grade 4 ICANS (n = 1). In the whole cohort, the overall response rate was 91.7%, with a complete response rate of 75.0%, which improved to 100% in DL-2 and -3. AT101 expansion correlates with CR and B-cell aplasia.

Conclusions
We developed a novel, safe, and potent CART19 product that recognizes a membrane-proximal domain of CD19 with fast on- and off-rates and showed significant efficacy and promising safety in patients with relapsed B-cell NHL.
ISSN
1476-4598
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/198708
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12943-023-01886-9
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