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Real-world use of tisagenlecleucel in infant acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Amy MoskopLauren PommertChristina BaggottSnehit PrabhuHolly L PacentaChristine L PhillipsJenna RossoffHeather E StefanskiJulie-An TalanoSteve P MargossianMichael R VernerisG Doug MyersNicole A KarrasPatrick A BrownMuna QayedMichelle L HermistonPrakash SatwaniChrista KrupskiAmy K KeatingRachel WilcoxCara A RabikVanessa A FabrizioVasant ChinnabhandarA Yasemin GokseninKevin J CurranCrystal L MackallTheodore W LaetschErin M GuestErin H BreeseLiora M Schultz
Published in: Blood advances (2022)
Infants with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) have poor outcomes because of chemotherapy resistance leading to high relapse rates. Tisagenlecleucel, a CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CART) therapy, is US Food and Drug Administration approved for relapsed or refractory B-ALL in patients ≤25 years; however, the safety and efficacy of this therapy in young patients is largely unknown because children <3 years of age were excluded from licensing studies. We retrospectively evaluated data from the Pediatric Real-World CAR Consortium to examine outcomes of patients with infant B-ALL who received tisagenlecleucel between 2017 and 2020 (n = 14). Sixty-four percent of patients (n = 9) achieved minimal residual disease-negative remission after CART and 50% of patients remain in remission at last follow-up. All patients with high disease burden at time of CART infusion (>M1 marrow) were refractory to this therapy (n = 5). Overall, tisagenlecleucel was tolerable in this population, with only 3 patients experiencing ≥grade 3 cytokine release syndrome. No neurotoxicity was reported. This is the largest report of tisagenlecleucel use in infant B-ALL and shows that this therapy is safe and can be effective in this population. Incorporating this novel immunotherapy into the treatment of infant B-ALL offers a promising therapy for a highly aggressive leukemia.
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