• Traitements

  • Traitements systémiques : applications cliniques

  • Lymphome

T-Cell Therapy for Lymphoma Using Nonengineered Multiantigen-Targeted T Cells Is Safe and Produces Durable Clinical Effects

Mené sur 32 patients atteints d'un lymphome à haut risque de récidive (17 cas) ou réfractaire à la chimiothérapie (15 cas), cet essai de phase I évalue la dose maximale tolérée d'une immunothérapie à base de lymphocytes T autologues ciblant 5 antigènes associés à la tumeur (PRAME, SSX2, MAGEA4, SURVIVIN, et NY-ESO-1), après l'échec de plusieurs lignes thérapeutiques (nombre médian de thérapies précédentes : 3)

PURPOSE : Patients with relapsed lymphomas often fail salvage therapies including high-dose chemotherapy and mono-antigen–specific T-cell therapies, highlighting the need for nontoxic, novel treatments. To that end, we clinically tested an autologous T-cell product that targets multiple tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) expressed by lymphomas with the intent of treating disease and preventing immune escape. PATIENTS AND METHODS : We expanded polyclonal T cells reactive to five TAAs: PRAME, SSX2, MAGEA4, SURVIVIN, and NY-ESO-1. Products were administered to 32 patients with Hodgkin lymphomas (n = 14) or non-Hodgkin lymphomas (n = 18) in a two-part phase I clinical trial, where the objective of the first phase was to establish the safety of targeting all five TAAs (fixed dose, 0.5 × 107 cells/m2) simultaneously and the second stage was to establish the maximum tolerated dose. Patients had received a median of three prior lines of therapy and either were at high risk for relapse (adjuvant arm, n = 17) or had chemorefractory disease (n = 15) at enrollment. RESULTS : Infusions were safe with no dose-limiting toxicities observed in either the antigen- or dose-escalation phases. Although the maximum tolerated dose was not reached, the maximum tested dose at which efficacy was observed (two infusions, 2 × 107 cells/m2) was determined as the recommended phase II dose. Of the patients with chemorefractory lymphomas, two (of seven) with Hodgkin lymphomas and four (of eight) with non-Hodgkin lymphomas achieved durable complete remissions (> 3 years). CONCLUSION : T cells targeting five TAAs and administered at doses of up to two infusions of 2 × 107 cells/m2 are well-tolerated by patients with lymphoma both as adjuvant and to treat chemorefractory lymphoma. Preliminary indicators of antilymphoma activity were seen in the chemorefractory cohort across both antigen- and dose-escalation phases.

Journal of Clinical Oncology 2021

Voir le bulletin