Long-term Safety and Activity of NY-ESO-1 SPEAR T Cells After Autologous Stem Cell Transplant for Myeloma
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
This study in patients with relapsed, refractory, or high-risk multiple myeloma (MM) evaluated the safety and activity of autologous T cells engineered to express an affinity-enhanced T-cell receptor (TCR) that recognizes a peptide shared by cancer antigens New York esophageal squamous cell carcinoma-1 (NY-ESO-1) and L-antigen family member 1 (LAGE-1) and presented by HLA-A*02:01. T cells collected from 25 HLA-A*02:01-positive patients with MM expressing NY-ESO-1 and/or LAGE-1 were activated, transduced with self-inactivating lentiviral vector encoding the NY-ESO-1TCR, and expanded in culture. After myeloablation and autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT), all 25 patients received an infusion of up to 1 × 10 NY-ESO-1 specific peptide enhanced affinity receptor (SPEAR) T cells. Objective response rate (International Myeloma Working Group consensus criteria) was 80% at day 42 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.59-0.93), 76% at day 100 (95% CI, 0.55-0.91), and 44% at 1 year (95% CI, 0.24-0.65). At year 1, 13/25 patients were disease progression-free (52%); 11 were responders (1 stringent complete response, 1 complete response, 8 very good partial response, 1 partial response). Three patients remained disease progression-free at 38.6, 59.2, and 60.6 months post-NY-ESO-1 SPEAR T-cell infusion. Median progression-free survival was 13.5 months (range, 3.2-60.6 months); median overall survival was 35.1 months (range, 6.4-66.7 months). Infusions were well tolerated; cytokine release syndrome was not reported. No fatal serious adverse events occurred during study conduct. NY-ESO-1 SPEAR T cells expanded in vivo, trafficked to bone marrow, demonstrated persistence, and exhibited tumor antigen-directed functionality. In this MM patient population, NY-ESO-1 SPEAR T-cell therapy in the context of ASCT was associated with antitumor activity. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01352286.
Fuchsl F, Untch J, Kavaka V, Zuleger G, Braun S, Schwanzer A Nat Commun. 2024; 15(1):10520.
PMID: 39627205 PMC: 11615276. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-53911-0.
Altan M, Lopes G, Hiltermann T, Govindan R, Villaruz L, Calvo E Clin Cancer Res. 2024; 31(3):529-542.
PMID: 39576208 PMC: 11788651. DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-24-1591.
Advances in adoptive cellular immunotherapy and therapeutic breakthroughs in multiple myeloma.
Pu J, Liu T, Sharma A, Jiang L, Wei F, Ren X Exp Hematol Oncol. 2024; 13(1):105.
PMID: 39468695 PMC: 11514856. DOI: 10.1186/s40164-024-00576-6.
NY-ESO-1 antigen: A promising frontier in cancer immunotherapy.
Alsalloum A, Shevchenko J, Sennikov S Clin Transl Med. 2024; 14(9):e70020.
PMID: 39275923 PMC: 11399778. DOI: 10.1002/ctm2.70020.
Enhanced tumor response to adoptive T cell therapy with PHD2/3-deficient CD8 T cells.
Dvorakova T, Finisguerra V, Formenti M, Loriot A, Boudhan L, Zhu J Nat Commun. 2024; 15(1):7789.
PMID: 39242595 PMC: 11379939. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-51782-z.