作者
Sabina Kaczanowska,Tara Murty,Ahmad Alimadadi,Cristina F. Contreras,Caroline Duault,Priyanka B. Subrahmanyam,Warren L. Reynolds,Norma A. Gutierrez,Reema Baskar,Catherine J. Wu,Franziska Michor,Jennifer Altreuter,Yang Liu,Aashna Jhaveri,Vandon T. Duong,Hima Anbunathan,Claire Victoria Ong,Hua Zhang,Radim Moravec,Joyce E. Yu,Roshni Biswas,Stephen Van Nostrand,James Lindsay,Mina Pichavant,Elena Sotillo,Donna Bernstein,Amanda Carbonell,Joanne Derdak,Jacquelyn Klicka-Skeels,Jack Segal,Eva Dombi,Stephanie A. Harmon,Barış Türkbey,Bita Sahaf,Sean C. Bendall,Holden T. Maecker,Steven L. Highfill,David Stroncek,John Glod,Melinda S. Merchant,Catherine C. Hedrick,Crystal L. Mackall,Sneha Ramakrishna,Rosandra N. Kaplan
摘要
Chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR-Ts) have remarkable efficacy in liquid tumors, but limited responses in solid tumors. We conducted a Phase I trial (NCT02107963) of GD2 CAR-Ts (GD2-CAR.OX40.28.z.iC9), demonstrating feasibility and safety of administration in children and young adults with osteosarcoma and neuroblastoma. Since CAR-T efficacy requires adequate CAR-T expansion, patients were grouped into good or poor expanders across dose levels. Patient samples were evaluated by multi-dimensional proteomic, transcriptomic, and epigenetic analyses. T cell assessments identified naive T cells in pre-treatment apheresis associated with good expansion, and exhausted T cells in CAR-T products with poor expansion. Myeloid cell assessment identified CXCR3+ monocytes in pre-treatment apheresis associated with good expansion. Longitudinal analysis of post-treatment samples identified increased CXCR3– classical monocytes in all groups as CAR-T numbers waned. Together, our data uncover mediators of CAR-T biology and correlates of expansion that could be utilized to advance immunotherapies for solid tumor patients.