A pilot study of cord blood-derived natural killer cells as maintenance therapy after autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
Yuling WuYue WangJie JiPu KuangXinchuan ChenZhigang LiuJian LiTian DongXuelian LiQiang ChenTing LiuPublished in: Annals of hematology (2023)
Natural killer (NK) cell based immunotherapy is an emerging strategy in hematologic malignancies because allogeneic NK cells can provide potent antitumor immunity without inducing graft-versus-host disease. Thus, we expanded cord blood-derived NK (CB-NK) cells ex vivo from random (MHC mismatched and KIR mismatched) donors, and investigate the feasibility and efficacy of repeated infusions CB-NK cells as maintenance therapy after autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (ASCT). Thirty-one patients with acute myeloid leukemia and high-risk lymphoma received ASCT and the adoptive CB-NK cell multiple infusions for maintenance therapy. Patients received a median dose of 5.98 × 10 7 /kg (range, 1.87-17.69 × 10 7 /kg) CB-NK cells and 23 patients completed four infusions, 8 patients received three infusions. Only mild infusion reactions occurred in 15.5% of 116 infusions. Compared to a contemporaneous cohort of 90 patients who did not receive NK cell therapy, the adoptive transfer of CB-NK cells as maintenance treatment showed a tendency of difference in decreasing the relapse rate between CB-NK group and control group (9.7% vs 24.4%). The patients who receiving NK cell infusions had a better PFS and OS than controls (4 year PFS, 84.4 ± 8.3% vs 73.5 ± 5.4%; and 4 year OS, 100% vs 78.1 ± 5.4%) . These findings demonstrate safety and validity of maintenance therapy using CB-NK cells multiple infusions after ASCT, and it is worthy of further clinical trial verification.
Keyphrases
- nk cells
- cell therapy
- cord blood
- acute myeloid leukemia
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- clinical trial
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- bone marrow
- randomized controlled trial
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- stem cell transplantation
- high dose
- patient reported outcomes
- combination therapy
- platelet rich plasma
- allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation