The safety and clinical effects of administering a multiantigen-targeted T cell therapy to patients with multiple myeloma.
Premal D LullaIfigeneia TzannouSpyridoula VasileiouGeorge CarrumCarlos Almeida RamosRammurti KambleTao WangMengfen WuMrinalini BilgiAdrian P GeeShivani MukhiBetty M ChungLinghua WangAyumi WatanabeManik KuvalekarMira JeongYumei LiShamika KetkarMatthew French-KimBambi GrilleyMalcolm K BrennerHelen E HeslopJuan F VeraAnn M LeenPublished in: Science translational medicine (2021)
Multiple myeloma (MM) is an almost always incurable malignancy of plasma cells. Despite the advent of new therapies, most patients eventually relapse or become treatment-refractory. Consequently, therapies with nonoverlapping mechanisms of action that are nontoxic and provide long-term benefit to patients with MM are greatly needed. To this end, we clinically tested an autologous multitumor-associated antigen (mTAA)-specific T cell product for the treatment of patients with high-risk, relapsed or refractory MM. In this study, we expanded polyclonal T cells from 23 patients with MM. T cells whose native T cell receptors were reactive toward five myeloma-expressed target TAAs (PRAME, SSX2, MAGEA4, Survivin, and NY-ESO-1) were enriched ex vivo. To date, we have administered escalating doses of these nonengineered mTAA-specific T cells (0.5 × 107 to 2 × 107 cells/m2) to 21 patients with MM, 9 of whom were at high risk of relapse after a median of 3 lines of prior therapy and 12 with active, relapsed or refractory disease after a median of 3.5 prior lines. The cells were well tolerated, with only two transient, grade III infusion-related adverse events. Furthermore, patients with active relapsed or refractory myeloma enjoyed a longer than expected progression-free survival and responders included three patients who achieved objective responses concomitant with detection of functional TAA-reactive T cell clonotypes derived from the infused mTAA product.
Keyphrases
- multiple myeloma
- induced apoptosis
- cell therapy
- free survival
- cell cycle arrest
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- acute myeloid leukemia
- newly diagnosed
- end stage renal disease
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- chronic kidney disease
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- hodgkin lymphoma
- oxidative stress
- stem cells
- ejection fraction
- cell death
- signaling pathway
- cell proliferation
- cancer therapy
- patient reported outcomes
- cerebral ischemia