4.6 Article

Infectious complications of CAR T-cell therapy across novel antigen targets in the first 30 days

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BLOOD ADVANCES
卷 5, 期 23, 页码 5312-5322

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DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2021004896

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  1. Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Center for Cancer Research
  2. Warren Grant Magnuson Clinical Center

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Infections are a common complication of CAR T-cell therapy, with the majority occurring within the first 30 days post-infusion. Different targets and diseases have varying proportions of infection incidences. Factors such as prior lines of therapy and recent infections are associated with a higher risk of infections, as revealed in multivariable analysis.
Infections are a known complication of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy with data largely emerging from CD19 CAR T-cell targeting. As CAR T-cell therapy continues to evolve, infection risks and management thereof will become increasingly important to optimize outcomes across the spectrum of antigens and disease targeted. We retrospectively characterized infectious complications occurring in 162 children and adults treated among 5 phase 1 CAR T-cell clinical trials. Trials included targeting of CD19, CD22, disialoganglioside (GD2) or B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA). Fifty-three patients (32.7%) had 76 infections between lymphocyte depleting (LD) chemotherapy and day 30 (D30); with the majority of infections (61, 80.3%) occurring between day 0 (D0) and D30. By trial, the highest proportion of infections was seen with CD22 CART cells (n = 23/53; 43.4%), followed by BCMA CART cells (n = 9/24; 37.5%). By disease, patients with multiple myeloma had the highest proportion of infections (9/24; 37.5%) followed by acute lymphoblastic leukemia (36/102; 35.3%). Grade 4 infections were rare (n = 4; 2.5%). Between D0 and D30, bacteremia and bacterial site infections were the most common infection type. In univariate analysis, increasing prior lines of therapy, recent infection within 100 days of LD chemotherapy, corticosteroid or tocilizumab use, and fever and neutropenia were associated with a higher risk of infection. In a multivariable analysis, only prior lines of therapy and recent infection were associated with higher risk of infection. In conclusion, we provide a broad overview of infection risk within the first 30 days post infusion across a host of multiple targets and diseases, elucidating both unique characteristics and commonalities highlighting aspects important to improving patient outcomes.

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