4.7 Article

Long-term follow-up of donor-derived CD7 CAR T-cell therapy in patients with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY & ONCOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13045-023-01427-3

Keywords

Hematologic malignancy; T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia; Chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy; Stem cell transplantation

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In this long-term follow-up study, donor-derived CD7 CAR T-cell treatment showed durable efficacy in a subset of patients with r/r T-ALL. However, disease relapse and severe infection were major causes of treatment failure.
BackgroundDonor-derived CD7-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells showed feasibility and early efficacy in patients with refractory or relapsed T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (r/r T-ALL), in a previous phase I trial report, at a median follow-up of 6.3 months. Here we report long-term safety and activity of the therapy after a 2-year follow-up.MethodsParticipants received CD7-directed CAR T cells derived from prior stem cell transplantation (SCT) donors or from HLA-matched new donors after lymphodepletion. The target dose was 1 x 10(6) (+/- 30%) CAR T cells per kg of patient weight. The primary endpoint was safety with efficacy secondary. This report focuses on the long-term follow-up and discusses them in the context of previously reported early outcomes.ResultsTwenty participants were enrolled and received infusion with CD7 CAR T cells. After a median follow-up time of 27.0 (range, 24.0-29.3) months, the overall response rate and complete response rate were 95% (19/20 patients) and 85% (17/20 patients), respectively, and 35% (7/20) of patients proceeded to SCT. Six patients experienced disease relapse with a median time-to-relapse of 6 (range, 4.0-10.9) months, and 4 of these 6 patients were found to have lost CD7 expression on tumor cells. Progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) rates 24 months after treatment were respectively 36.8% (95% CI, 13.8-59.8%) and 42.3% (95% CI, 18.8-65.8%), with median PFS and OS of respectively 11.0 (95% CI, 6.7-12.5) months and 18.3 (95% CI, 12.5-20.8) months. Previously reported short-term adverse events (< 30 days after treatment) included grade 3-4 cytokine release syndrome (CRS; 10%) and grade 1-2 graft-versus-host disease (GVHD; 60%). Serious adverse events reported > 30 days after treatment included five infections and one grade 4 intestinal GVHD. Despite good CD7 CAR T-cell persistence, non-CAR T and natural killer cells were predominantly CD7-negative and eventually returned to normal levels in about half of the participants.ConclusionsIn this 2-year follow-up analysis, donor-derived CD7 CAR T-cell treatment demonstrated durable efficacy in a subset of patients with r/r T-ALL. Disease relapse was the main cause of treatment failure, and severe infection was a noteworthy late-onset adverse event.

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