4.7 Article

Risk assessment with low-pass whole-genome sequencing of cell-free DNA before CD19 CAR T-cell therapy for large B-cell lymphoma

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 140, Issue 5, Pages 504-515

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood.2022015601

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Funding

  1. Schweitzer Family Fund
  2. Cancer Prevention & Research Institute of Texas [RP200385]
  3. Anderson National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute Cancer Support Grant [P30 CA016672]
  4. Leukemia and Lymphoma Society
  5. Lymphoma Research Foundation Career Development award

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IpWGS of cfDNA can be used for risk stratification to identify high-risk patients and guide patient selection and evaluation of targeted therapies in future clinical trials.
Patients with relapsed or refractory large B-cell lymphomas (rrLBCL) can achieve long-term remission after CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy (CART19). However, more than half of recipients will experience treatment failure. Thus, approaches are needed to identify high-risk patients who may benefit from alternative or consolidative therapy. We evaluated low-pass whole-genome sequencing (IpWGS) of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) before CART19 as a new approach for risk stratification. We performed IpWGS on pretreatment plasma samples from 122 patients at time of leukapheresis who received standard-of-care CART19 for rrLBCL to define DNA copy number alterations (CNAs). In multivariable selection, high focal CNA score (FCS) denoting genomic instability was the most significant pretreatment variable associated with inferior 3-month complete response rates (28% vs 56%, P = .0029), progression-free survival (PFS; P = .0007; hazard ratio, 2.11), and overall survival (OS; P = .0026; hazard ratio, 2.10). We identified 34 unique focal CNAs in 108 (89%) patients; of these, deletion 10q23.3 leading to loss of FAS death receptor was the most highly associated with poor outcomes, leading to inferior PFS 3.49) and OS (P = .0027; hazard ratio, 2.68). By combining FCS with traditional markers of increased tumor bulk (elevated lactate dehydrogenase and >1 extranodal site), we built a simple risk model that could reliably risk stratify patients. Thus, IpWGS of cfDNA is a minimally invasive assay that could rapidly identify high-risk patients and may guide patient selection for and targeted therapies to evaluate in future clinical trials.

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