Post-infusion CAR TReg cells identify patients resistant to CD19-CAR therapy

输注后CAR TReg细胞可识别对CD19-CAR疗法耐药的患者

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作者:Zinaida Good # ,Jay Y Spiegel # ,Bita Sahaf ,Meena B Malipatlolla ,Zach J Ehlinger ,Sreevidya Kurra ,Moksha H Desai ,Warren D Reynolds ,Anita Wong Lin ,Panayiotis Vandris ,Fang Wu ,Snehit Prabhu ,Mark P Hamilton ,John S Tamaresis ,Paul J Hanson ,Shabnum Patel ,Steven A Feldman ,Matthew J Frank ,John H Baird ,Lori Muffly ,Gursharan K Claire ,Juliana Craig ,Katherine A Kong ,Dhananjay Wagh ,John Coller ,Sean C Bendall ,Robert J Tibshirani ,Sylvia K Plevritis ,David B Miklos ,Crystal L Mackall

Abstract

Approximately 60% of patients with large B cell lymphoma treated with chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapies targeting CD19 experience disease progression, and neurotoxicity remains a challenge. Biomarkers associated with resistance and toxicity are limited. In this study, single-cell proteomic profiling of circulating CAR T cells in 32 patients treated with CD19-CAR identified that CD4+Helios+ CAR T cells on day 7 after infusion are associated with progressive disease and less severe neurotoxicity. Deep profiling demonstrated that this population is non-clonal and manifests hallmark features of T regulatory (TReg) cells. Validation cohort analysis upheld the link between higher CAR TReg cells with clinical progression and less severe neurotoxicity. A model combining expansion of this subset with lactate dehydrogenase levels, as a surrogate for tumor burden, was superior for predicting durable clinical response compared to models relying on each feature alone. These data credential CAR TReg cell expansion as a novel biomarker of response and toxicity after CAR T cell therapy and raise the prospect that this subset may regulate CAR T cell responses in humans.

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