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Interleukin-15-armored GPC3-CAR T cells for patients with solid cancers.

David SteffinNisha GhatwaiAntonino MontalbanoPurva RathiAmy N CourtneyAzlann B ArnettJulien FleurenceRamy SweidanNicholas WangHuimin ZhangPrakash MasandJohn M MarisDaniel MartinezJennifer PogorilerNavin VaradarajanSachin G ThakkarDeborah LyonNatasha LaptevaZhuyong MeiKalyani PatelDolores Lopez-TerradaCarlos RamosPremal LullaTannaz ArmaghanyBambi J GrilleyGianpietro DottiLeonid S MetelitsaHelen E HeslopMalcolm K BrennerPavel SumazinAndras A Heczey
Published in: Research square (2024)
Interleukin-15 (IL15) promotes the survival of T lymphocytes and enhances the antitumor properties of CAR T cells in preclinical models of solid neoplasms in which CAR T cells have limited efficacy 1-4 . Glypican-3 (GPC3) is expressed in a group of solid cancers 5-10 , and here we report the first evaluation in humans of the effects of IL15 co-expression on GPC3-CAR T cells. Cohort 1 patients (NCT02905188/NCT02932956) received GPC3-CAR T cells, which were safe but produced no objective antitumor responses and reached peak expansion at two weeks. Cohort 2 patients (NCT05103631/NCT04377932) received GPC3-CAR T cells that co-expressed IL15 (15.CAR), which mediated significantly increased cell expansion and induced a disease control rate of 66% and antitumor response rate of 33%. Infusion of 15.CAR T cells was associated with increased incidence of cytokine release syndrome, which was rapidly ameliorated by activation of the inducible caspase 9 safety switch. Compared to non-responders, tumor-infiltrating 15.CAR T cells from responders showed repression of SWI/SNF epigenetic regulators and upregulation of FOS and JUN family members as well as genes related to type I interferon signaling. Collectively, these results demonstrate that IL15 increases the expansion, intratumoral survival, and antitumor activity of GPC3-CAR T cells in patients.
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