Oligoclonal T Cells Transiently Expand and Express Tim-3 and PD-1 Following Anti-CD19 CAR T Cell Therapy: A Case Report.
Christopher Ronald FunkChristopher T PetersenNeera JagirdarSruthi RavindranathanDavid L JayeChristopher R FlowersAmelia LangstonEdmund K WallerPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2018)
Clinical trials of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells in hematologic malignancy associate remissions with two profiles of CAR T cell proliferation kinetics, which differ based upon costimulatory domain. Additional T cell intrinsic factors that influence or predict clinical response remain unclear. To address this gap, we report the case of a 68-year-old woman with refractory/relapsed diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL), treated with tisagenlecleucel (anti-CD19), with a CD137 costimulatory domain (4-1BB) on an investigational new drug application (#16944). For two months post-infusion, the patient experienced dramatic regression of subcutaneous nodules of DLBCL. Unfortunately, her CAR T exhibited kinetics unassociated with remission, and she died of DLBCL-related sequelae. Serial phenotypic analysis of peripheral blood alongside sequencing of the β-peptide variable region of the T cell receptor (TCRβ) revealed distinct waves of oligoclonal T cell expansion with dynamic expression of immune checkpoint molecules. One week prior to CAR T cell contraction, T cell immunoglobulin mucin domain 3 (Tim-3) and programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) exhibited peak expressions on both the CD8 T cell (Tim-3 ≈ 50%; PD-1 ≈ 17%) and CAR T cell subsets (Tim-3 ≈ 78%; PD-1 ≈ 40%). These correlative observations draw attention to Tim-3 and PD-1 signaling pathways in context of CAR T cell exhaustion.
Keyphrases
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- cell therapy
- peripheral blood
- epstein barr virus
- cell proliferation
- clinical trial
- single cell
- signaling pathway
- emergency department
- poor prognosis
- stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- working memory
- rheumatoid arthritis
- pi k akt
- nk cells
- immune response
- phase ii
- amino acid
- protein protein
- cell cycle
- smooth muscle
- open label