作者
Andras Heczey,David H.M. Steffin,Nisha Ghatwai,Antonino Montalbano,Purva Rathi,Amy N. Courtney,Azlann Arnett,Julien Fleurence,Ramy Sweidan,Tao Wang,Huimin Zhang,Prakash Masand,John M. Maris,Dan Martinez,Jennier Pogoriler,Navin Varadarajan,Sachin G. Thakkar,Deborah Lyon,Natasha Lapteva,Zhuyong Mei,Kalyani Patel,Dolores López‐Terrada,Carlos A. Ramos,Premal Lulla,Tannaz Armaghany,Bambi Grilley,Gianpietro Dotti,Leonid S. Metelitsa,Helen E. Heslop,Malcolm K. Brenner,Pavel Sumazin
摘要
Abstract Interleukin-15 (IL15) promotes the survival of T lymphocytes and enhances the antitumor properties of CAR T cells in preclinical models of solid neoplasms in which CAR T cells have limited efficacy1-4. Glypican-3 (GPC3) is expressed in a group of solid cancers5-10, and here we report the first evaluation in humans of the effects of IL15 co-expression on GPC3-CAR T cells. Cohort 1 patients (NCT02905188/NCT02932956) received GPC3-CAR T cells, which were safe but produced no objective antitumor responses and reached peak expansion at two weeks. Cohort 2 patients (NCT05103631/NCT04377932) received GPC3-CAR T cells that co-expressed IL15 (15.CAR), which mediated significantly increased cell expansion and induced a disease control rate of 66% and antitumor response rate of 33%. Infusion of 15.CAR T cells was associated with increased incidence of cytokine release syndrome, which was rapidly ameliorated by activation of the inducible caspase 9 safety switch. Compared to non-responders, tumor-infiltrating 15.CAR T cells from responders showed repression of SWI/SNF epigenetic regulators and upregulation of FOS and JUN family members as well as genes related to type I interferon signaling. Collectively, these results demonstrate that IL15 increases the expansion, intratumoral survival, and antitumor activity of GPC3-CAR T cells in patients.