4.8 Article

Case report: CD38-directed CAR-T cell therapy: A novel immunotherapy targeting CD38-positive blasts overcomes TKI and chemotherapy resistance of myeloid chronic myeloid leukemia in blastic phase

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.1012981

Keywords

chronic myeloid leukemia; blast phase; tyrosine kinase inhibitor; chimeric antigen receptor T cell; CD38

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81873443, 82070162, 81900175, 81400155, 81700139, 80900175]
  2. Major Natural Science Research Projects in institutions of higher education of Jiangsu Province [19KJA210002]
  3. Key Science Research Project of Jiangsu Commission of Health [K2019022]
  4. Translational Research Grant of NCRCH [2020ZKZC04]
  5. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20190181, BK20201169, BK20170360, BK2019042931]
  6. Frontier Clinical Technical Project of the Science and Technology Department of Jiangsu Province [BE2018652]
  7. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions (PAPD)

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Resistance to TKIs and chemotherapy in CML-BP may be overcome by CAR-T-38 cell therapy, targeting CD38 antigen, leading to significant therapeutic responses.
Resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) is a tough problem in the treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia in blastic phase (CML-BP), which was often associated with acquired mutations in the kinase domain and not eliminating the leukemic stem cells. The efficacy of TKI or combination with chemotherapy in CML-BP remains unsatisfactory. Chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR-T) cell immunotherapy may overcome TKI and chemotherapy resistance. However, lack of ideal targetable antigens is a major obstacle for treating patients with myeloid malignancies. CD38 is known to be expressed on most (acute myeloid leukemia) AML cells, and its lack of expression on hematopoietic stem cells renders it as a potential therapeutic target for myeloid CML-BP. We develop a CD38-directed CAR-T cell therapy for AML, and two patients with myeloid CML-BP were enrolled (NCT04351022). Two patients, harboring E255K and T315I mutation in the ABL kinase domain, respectively, were resistant to multiple TKIs (imatinib, dasatinib, nilotinib, and ponatinib) and intensive chemotherapy. The blasts in the bone marrow of two patients exhibited high expression of CD38. After tumor reduction chemotherapy and lymphodepletion chemotherapy, 1 x 10(7) CAR-T-38 cells per kilogram of body weight were administered. They achieved minimal residual disease-negative and BCR::ABL1-negative complete remission and experienced grade II cytokine release syndrome manifesting as fever. Our data highlighted that CAR-T-38 cell therapy may overcome TKI and chemotherapy resistance in patients with myeloid CML-BP.

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