A multiple myeloma patient whose cancer had stopped responding after nine different treatment regimens experienced a complete remission after receiving an investigational personalized cellular therapy known as CTL019 developed by a team at the University of Pennsylvania. The investigational treatment was combined with chemotherapy and an autologous stem cell transplant — a new strategy designed to target and kill the cells that give rise to myeloma cells.
The team’s findings are published in a case report in the New England Journal of Medicine. Prior to receiving the therapy, the patient had already received nine different therapy regimens in the five years since her diagnosis, including a previous autologous stem cell transplant, which had only controlled her disease for a few months. Her bone marrow was almost entirely filled by cancerous cells when she entered the study. By 130 days after receiving the infusion of engineered cells, tests revealed no evidence of disease. The patient — who was the first to be treated as part of this trial — remains in remission more than 12 months after receiving this therapy.
The new report expands on data that were presented during the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting in June 2015 about the first five myeloma patients to receive CTL019, which was tested in trials for leukemia beginning in 2010. Now, the Penn researcher team also report updates on the myeloma trial’s overall progress: Of ten patients who have received the therapy to date, six remain progression-free, though two patients have only very recently been treated.
“We couldn’t be more pleased with this patient’s response,” said the study’s co-lead author, Alfred Garfall, MD, an assistant professor of Hematology/Oncology in Penn’s Abramson Cancer Center and Perelman School of Medicine. “We believe her CTL019 cells made the difference, since we would not have expected such a durable remission with a transplant alone, considering the very transient response this patient had to her first transplant several years ago.”
CTL019 begins with each patient’s own T cells, collected through a procedure similar to dialysis. The cells are then reprogramed to hunt and potentially kill cancer cells in the patient’s body. Patients who have enrolled in trials of this approach for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), and non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) typically undergo lymphodepleting chemotherapy before receiving an infusion of their newly engineered cells. The modified T cells contain a protein known as a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR), which is designed to target the CD19 protein found on the surface of B cells, including the cancerous B cells that characterize several types of leukemia and lymphoma.
The team designed a different approach to study the therapy in myeloma, adding in an infusion of the patient’s own stem cells along with their lymphodepleting chemotherapy (melphalan), followed by CTL019 infusion about two weeks later. Although myeloma is, like leukemias and lymphomas, a cancer involving white blood cells known as lymphocytes, myeloma cells don’t traditionally express CD19 on their surface because they arise from the most mature type of lymphocytes — plasma cells.
“There was some skepticism about whether a CD19-directed therapy would work in this disease, since nearly all of these patients’ cancerous plasma cells do not express CD19,” said the study’s senior author, Edward Stadtmauer, MD, chief of Hematologic Malignancies and a professor of Hematology/Oncology in Penn’s Abramson Cancer Center and Perelman School of Medicine. “Since there was data showing that the possible stem cells can be CD19-positive, our hypothesis was that we may be able to devise a therapy targeted at early precursors of those cells.”
The patient experienced transplantation-related side effects during the time prior to receiving CTL019, including neutropenia and thrombocytopenia, nausea, fever, and an infection. After receiving the engineered cells, she experienced no fevers or other signs of cytokine release syndrome (CRS), a condition that has been observed in other patients undergoing CTL019.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from materials provided by University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal Reference:
- Alfred L. Garfall et al. Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells against CD19 for Multiple Myeloma. NEJM, September 2015 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1504542