Abstract 3500: T cells redirected against HER2 for the adoptive immunotherapy for HER2-positive osteosarcoma

Abstract INTRODUCTION: The prognosis for patients with advanced osteosarcoma (OS) has not improved over the last two decades. Hence novel biologically-based therapies, such as immunotherapy, are needed for these patients. We have shown in preclinical studies that T cells, genetically modified with a...

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Published inCancer research (Chicago, Ill.) Vol. 72; no. 8_Supplement; p. 3500
Main Authors Ahmed, Nabil, Brawley, Vita, Diouf, Oumar, Anderson, Peter, Hicks, John, Wang, Lisa, Dotti, Gianpietro, Wels, Winfried, Liu, Hao, Gee, Adrian, Rooney, Cliona, Brenner, Malcolm, Heslop, Helen, Gottschalk, Stephen
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 15.04.2012
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Summary:Abstract INTRODUCTION: The prognosis for patients with advanced osteosarcoma (OS) has not improved over the last two decades. Hence novel biologically-based therapies, such as immunotherapy, are needed for these patients. We have shown in preclinical studies that T cells, genetically modified with a HER2-specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR; HER2-CAR T cells), kill HER2+ OS cells ex vivo and induce regression of HER2+ OS xenografts in animal models. Based on these findings we developed a Phase I/II clinical study with HER2-CAR T cells in patients with metastatic and/or recurrent OS. METHODS: The primary objective of this clinical trial is to determine the safety of escalating doses of HER2-CAR T cells in patients with advanced HER2+ OS. The secondary objective is to determine the expansion, persistence and anti-tumor effects of infused HER2-CAR T cells. RESULTS: 43 (78%) out of 55 screened OS patients had HER2+ tumors. Twenty one HER2-CAR T-cell lines have been generated to date by retroviral transduction. Median HER2-CAR expression was 67.4% (range 50.7-85.6%) and HER2-CAR T cells killed HER2+ OS cells in contrast to non-transduced T cells (p <0.0001). The median CD4+:CD8+ T-cell ratio was 1:1.3, and T-cell products contained naïve (CD45RA+; median: 11.8%; range 2.4-33.2%), effector memory (CD45RO+/CCR7-/CD62L-; median: 29.3%; range: 7.8-67.5%), and central memory T cells (CD45RO+/CD62L+; median 55.9%; range: 21.9-87.9%). Nine patients have been infused so far at HER2-CAR T-cell doses between 104/m2 to 1x106/m2. Infusions were well tolerated without systemic side effects, and no increase of proinflammatory cytokines (IL-2, IFN-γ, GM-CSF, TNF-α) was observed in the patients’ plasma post infusion. HER2-CAR T cells were detectable for up to 3 months post infusion. CONCLUSION: HER2-CAR T cells have shown promising antitumor activity in preclinical OS animal models. We are currently evaluating the safety and efficacy of HER2-CAR T cells in a Phase I/II clinical study. Initial safety data at low T-cell dose levels are encouraging, warranting further active exploration of HER2-CAR T-cell based therapies for OS and other HER2+ malignancies. Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 103rd Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2012 Mar 31-Apr 4; Chicago, IL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2012;72(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 3500. doi:1538-7445.AM2012-3500
ISSN:0008-5472
1538-7445
DOI:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2012-3500