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A non-antibiotic-disrupted gut microbiome is associated with clinical responses to CD19-CAR-T cell cancer immunotherapy.

Christoph K Stein-ThoeringerNeeraj Y SainiEli ZamirViktoria BlumenbergMaria-Luisa SchubertUria MorMatthias A FanteSabine SchmidtEiko HayaseTomo HayaseRoman RohrbachChia-Chi ChangLauren McDanielIvonne FloresRogier GaiserMatthias EdingerDaniel WolffMartin HeidenreichPaolo StratiRanjit NairDai ChiharaLuis E FayadSairah AhmedSwaminathan P IyerRaphael E SteinerPreetesh JainLoretta J NastoupilJason R WestinReetakshi AroraMichael L WangJoel TurnerMeghan MengesMelanie Hidalgo-VargasKayla ReidPeter DregerAnita SchmittCarsten Muller-TidowFrederick L LockeMarco L DavilaRichard E ChamplinChristopher R FlowersElizabeth J ShpallHendrik PoeckSattva S NeelapuMichael SchmittMarion SubkleweMichael D JainRobert R JenqEran Elinav
Published in: Nature medicine (2023)
Increasing evidence suggests that the gut microbiome may modulate the efficacy of cancer immunotherapy. In a B cell lymphoma patient cohort from five centers in Germany and the United States (Germany, n = 66; United States, n = 106; total, n = 172), we demonstrate that wide-spectrum antibiotics treatment ('high-risk antibiotics') prior to CD19-targeted chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell therapy is associated with adverse outcomes, but this effect is likely to be confounded by an increased pretreatment tumor burden and systemic inflammation in patients pretreated with high-risk antibiotics. To resolve this confounding effect and gain insights into antibiotics-masked microbiome signals impacting CAR-T efficacy, we focused on the high-risk antibiotics non-exposed patient population. Indeed, in these patients, significant correlations were noted between pre-CAR-T infusion Bifidobacterium longum and microbiome-encoded peptidoglycan biosynthesis, and CAR-T treatment-associated 6-month survival or lymphoma progression. Furthermore, predictive pre-CAR-T treatment microbiome-based machine learning algorithms trained on the high-risk antibiotics non-exposed German cohort and validated by the respective US cohort robustly segregated long-term responders from non-responders. Bacteroides, Ruminococcus, Eubacterium and Akkermansia were most important in determining CAR-T responsiveness, with Akkermansia also being associated with pre-infusion peripheral T cell levels in these patients. Collectively, we identify conserved microbiome features across clinical and geographical variations, which may enable cross-cohort microbiome-based predictions of outcomes in CAR-T cell immunotherapy.
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