4.5 Review

Autologous engineered T cell receptor therapy in advanced cancer

Journal

HUMAN VACCINES & IMMUNOTHERAPEUTICS
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2023.2290356

Keywords

Multitargeted autologous T-cell therapy; lymphodepletion; advanced cancer; adoptive cell therapy; ACT; T- cell nfusion; atezolizumab

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This study developed a personalized autologous T-cell therapy program for advanced cancer patients. The treatment showed promising results with a high rate of disease stabilization and prolonged disease control in some patients. The feasibility and tolerability of IMA101 were demonstrated, highlighting the potential of multi-targeted adoptive cell therapy for further investigation.
To overcome challenges associated with adoptive cell therapy (ACT), we developed a personalized autologous T-cell therapy program. Patients with advanced cancer with HLA-A *02:01 allele and tumor expression of PRAME, MAGEA1, MAGEA4, MAGEA8, NY-ESO-1, COL6A3 exon 6, MXRA5, and/or MMP1 underwent leukapheresis and T-cell product manufacturing. Patients received lymphodepletion, IMA101 infusion and interleukin 2 for 14 days. Of 214 screened patients, 14 were treated (6, IMA101; 8, IMA101 and atezolizumab). The most common adverse events were cytokine release syndrome (G1, n = 6; G2, n = 4) and cytopenia. At 6 weeks, 12 (85.7%) patients had stable disease. Three patients had prolonged disease stabilization for 12.9, 7.3, and 13.7 months, respectively. The median progression-free survival and overall survival were 3.4 months and 9.4 months, respectively. Target-specific T cells expanded to constitute up to 78.7% of CD8+ cells. In conclusion, IMA101 was feasible and well tolerated, leveraging the potential of multi-targeted ACT that warrants further investigation.

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