Metastatic gastric cancer target lesion complete response with Claudin18.2-CAR T cells.
Gregory P BottaJoseph ChaoHong MaMichael HahnGloria SierraJie JiaAmanda Y HendrixJoy V Nolte FongAudrey WeenPeter VuAaron MillerMichael ChoiBenjamin HeymanGregory A DanielsDan S KaufmanCatriona JamiesonZonghai LiEzra CohenPublished in: Journal for immunotherapy of cancer (2024)
Treatment of hematologic malignancies with patient-derived anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells has demonstrated long-term remissions for patients with otherwise treatment-refractory advanced leukemia and lymphoma. Conversely, CAR T-cell treatment of solid tumors, including advanced gastric cancer (GC), has proven more challenging due to on-target off-tumor toxicities, poor tumor T-cell infiltration, inefficient CAR T-cell expansion, immunosuppressive tumor microenvironments, and demanding preconditioning regimens. We report the exceptional results of autologous Claudin18.2-targeted CAR T cells (CT041) in a patient with metastatic GC, who had progressed on four lines of combined systemic chemotherapy and immunotherapy. After two CT041 infusions, the patient had target lesion complete response and sustained an 8-month overall partial response with only minimal ascites. Moreover, tumor-informed circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) reductions coincided with rapid CAR T-cell expansion and radiologic response. No severe toxicities occurred, and the patient's quality of life significantly improved. This experience supports targeting Claudin18.2-positive GC with CAR T-cell therapy and helps to validate ctDNA as a biomarker in CAR T-cell therapy. Clinical Insight: Claudin18.2-targeted CAR T cells can safely provide complete objective and ctDNA response in salvage metastatic GC.
Keyphrases
- cell therapy
- circulating tumor
- cell free
- small cell lung cancer
- squamous cell carcinoma
- stem cells
- case report
- computed tomography
- circulating tumor cells
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cancer therapy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- magnetic resonance
- image quality
- radiation therapy
- gas chromatography
- mass spectrometry
- lymph node
- oxidative stress
- locally advanced
- dual energy
- rectal cancer