医学
推车
免疫学
脑病
细胞因子释放综合征
嵌合抗原受体
内科学
T细胞
免疫系统
机械工程
工程类
作者
Caroline Diorio,Laura Hernandez-Miyares,Diego A. Espinoza,Brenda Banwell,Amit Bar‐Or,Amanda M. DiNofia,Allison Barz Leahy,Zachary Martinez,Regina M. Myers,Sarah Hopkins,Susan R. Rheingold,David T. Teachey,Angela N. Viaene,Lisa Wray,Shannon L. Maude,Stephan A. Grupp,Jennifer L. McGuire
出处
期刊:Blood
[American Society of Hematology]
日期:2024-06-21
标识
DOI:10.1182/blood.2024023933
摘要
Immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS) is a common but potentially severe adverse event associated with chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CART) therapy characterized by the development of acute neurologic symptoms following CART infusion. ICANS encompasses a wide clinical spectrum typified by mild to severe encephalopathy, seizures and/or cerebral edema. As more patients have been treated with CART new ICANS phenomenology has emerged. We present the clinical course of five children who developed acute onset of quadriparesis or paraparesis associated with abnormal brain and/or spine neuroimaging after infusion of CD19 or CD22-directed CART, adverse events not previously reported in children. Orthogonal data from autopsy studies, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow cytometry and CSF proteomics/cytokine profiling demonstrated chronic white matter destruction, but a notable lack of inflammatory pathologic changes and cell populations. Instead, children with quadriparesis or paraparesis post-CART therapy had lower levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as interferon gamma (IFN), CCL17, CCL23, and CXCL10 than those who did not develop quadriparesis or paraparesis. Taken together, these findings imply a non-inflammatory source of this newly described ICANS phenomenon in children. The pathophysiology of some neurologic symptoms following CART may therefore have a more complex etiology than exclusive T-cell activation and excessive cytokine production.
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