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Bispecific T cell engager therapy for refractory rheumatoid arthritis.

Laura BucciMelanie HagenTobias RotheMaria Gabriella RaimondoFilippo FagniCarlo TurAndreas WirschingJochen WackerArtur WilhelmJean-Philippe AugerMilena L PachowskyMarkus EcksteinStefano AliverniniAngelo ZoliGerhard KrönkeStefan UderhardtAline BozecMaria Antonietta D'AgostinoLarissa Valor-MéndezRicardo Grieshaber-Bouyer
Published in: Nature medicine (2024)
Bispecific T cell engagers (BiTEs) kill B cells by engaging T cells. BiTEs are highly effective in acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Here we treated six patients with multidrug-resistant rheumatoid arthritis (RA) with the CD19xCD3 BiTE blinatumomab under compassionate use. Low doses of blinatumomab led to B cell depletion and concomitant decrease of T cells, documenting their engager function. Treatment was safe, with brief increase in body temperature and acute phase proteins during first infusion but no signs of clinically relevant cytokine-release syndrome. Blinatumomab led to a rapid decline in RA clinical disease activity in all patients, improved synovitis in ultrasound and FAPI-PET-CT and reduced autoantibodies. High-dimensional flow cytometry analysis of B cells documented an immune reset with depletion of activated memory B cells, which were replaced by nonclass-switched IgD-positive naïve B cells. Together, these data suggest the feasibility and potential for BiTEs to treat RA. This approach warrants further exploration on other B-cell-mediated autoimmune diseases.
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