: Engineered cellular therapy with CD19-targeting chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR-Ts) has revolutionized outcomes for patients with relapsed/refractory large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL), but the cellular and molecular features associated with response remain largely unresolved. We analyzed serial peripheral blood samples ranging from the day of apheresis (day -28/baseline) to 28 days after CAR-T infusion from 50 patients with LBCL treated with axicabtagene ciloleucel by integrating single-cell RNA and T-cell receptor sequencing, flow cytometry, and mass cytometry to characterize features associated with response to CAR-T. Pretreatment patient characteristics associated with response included the presence of B cells and increased absolute lymphocyte count to absolute monocyte count ratio (ALC/AMC). Infusion products from responders were enriched for clonally expanded, highly activated CD8+ T cells. We expanded these observations to 99 patients from the ZUMA-1 cohort and identified a subset of patients with elevated baseline B cells, 80% of whom were complete responders. We integrated B-cell proportion ≥0.5% and ALC/AMC ≥1.2 into a 2-factor predictive model and applied this model to the ZUMA-1 cohort. Estimated progression-free survival at 1 year in patients meeting 1 or both criteria was 65% vs 31% for patients meeting neither criterion. Our results suggest that patients' immunologic state at baseline affects the likelihood of response to CAR-T through both modulation of the T-cell apheresis product composition and promoting a more favorable circulating immune compartment before therapy. These baseline immunologic features, measured readily in the clinical setting before CAR-T, can be applied to predict response to therapy.

Baseline immune state and T-cell clonal kinetics are associated with durable response to CAR-T therapy in large B-cell lymphoma / Maurer, Katie; Grabski, Isabella N; Houot, Roch; Gohil, Satyen H; Miura, Shogo; Redd, Robert; Lyu, Haoxiang; Lu, Wesley; Arihara, Yohei; Budka, Justin; Mcdonough, Mikaela; Ansuinelli, Michela; Reynolds, Carol; Jacene, Heather; Li, Shuqiang; Livak, Kenneth J; Ritz, Jerome; Miles, Brodie; Mattie, Mike; Neuberg, Donna S; Irizarry, Rafael A; Armand, Philippe; Wu, Catherine J; Jacobson, Caron. - In: BLOOD. - ISSN 1528-0020. - 144:24(2024). [10.1182/blood.2024024381]

Baseline immune state and T-cell clonal kinetics are associated with durable response to CAR-T therapy in large B-cell lymphoma

Ansuinelli, Michela;
2024

Abstract

: Engineered cellular therapy with CD19-targeting chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR-Ts) has revolutionized outcomes for patients with relapsed/refractory large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL), but the cellular and molecular features associated with response remain largely unresolved. We analyzed serial peripheral blood samples ranging from the day of apheresis (day -28/baseline) to 28 days after CAR-T infusion from 50 patients with LBCL treated with axicabtagene ciloleucel by integrating single-cell RNA and T-cell receptor sequencing, flow cytometry, and mass cytometry to characterize features associated with response to CAR-T. Pretreatment patient characteristics associated with response included the presence of B cells and increased absolute lymphocyte count to absolute monocyte count ratio (ALC/AMC). Infusion products from responders were enriched for clonally expanded, highly activated CD8+ T cells. We expanded these observations to 99 patients from the ZUMA-1 cohort and identified a subset of patients with elevated baseline B cells, 80% of whom were complete responders. We integrated B-cell proportion ≥0.5% and ALC/AMC ≥1.2 into a 2-factor predictive model and applied this model to the ZUMA-1 cohort. Estimated progression-free survival at 1 year in patients meeting 1 or both criteria was 65% vs 31% for patients meeting neither criterion. Our results suggest that patients' immunologic state at baseline affects the likelihood of response to CAR-T through both modulation of the T-cell apheresis product composition and promoting a more favorable circulating immune compartment before therapy. These baseline immunologic features, measured readily in the clinical setting before CAR-T, can be applied to predict response to therapy.
2024
CAR-T, lymphoma, immune-response
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Baseline immune state and T-cell clonal kinetics are associated with durable response to CAR-T therapy in large B-cell lymphoma / Maurer, Katie; Grabski, Isabella N; Houot, Roch; Gohil, Satyen H; Miura, Shogo; Redd, Robert; Lyu, Haoxiang; Lu, Wesley; Arihara, Yohei; Budka, Justin; Mcdonough, Mikaela; Ansuinelli, Michela; Reynolds, Carol; Jacene, Heather; Li, Shuqiang; Livak, Kenneth J; Ritz, Jerome; Miles, Brodie; Mattie, Mike; Neuberg, Donna S; Irizarry, Rafael A; Armand, Philippe; Wu, Catherine J; Jacobson, Caron. - In: BLOOD. - ISSN 1528-0020. - 144:24(2024). [10.1182/blood.2024024381]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1733690
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