A new CAR T-cell
therapy for B-cell cancers promises to reduce the antigen escape currently
found in therapies that only target CD19.
Researchers at University Hospitals Seidman Cancer
Center and Case Western Reserve University, both US, have developed a novel
approach to chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy for B-cell cancers
that has shown success in pre-clinical studies. The team say that the new
therapy triples the targeted antigens on cancer cells – a “back up” approach
that promises to greatly reduce the potential for antigen escape currently
found in CAR T-cell therapies that solely target CD19.
The new B-cell activating factor (BAFF) CAR T
product developed by the researchers binds specifically to three receptors
instead of one – BAFF-R, BCMA and TACI, providing more therapeutic options. At
least two of these three receptors are found in almost all B-cell cancers, with
some cancers expressing all three. Experimental results show that the BAFF CAR
T is effective at killing multiple B-cell cancers in vitro and in vivo.
According to the team, because the new BAFF CAR T-cell therapy is based on a
ligand protein and not an individual antibody fragment, it can target all the
BAFF receptors on the cancer cell.
“Cancer cells are tricky,” said Dr Reshmi
Parameswaran, senior author of the study published Nature Communications. “The
cancer cells will shed the CD19 antigen and suddenly become CD19-negative and
therefore not respond to the CD19 CAR T-cell therapy. Thus, there is a great
need to identify alternative targeting strategies and CAR designs. With the
BAFF CAR T, we hope that even if one receptor is lost, the others will do the
job. Also, cancer cells that do not express CD19 but express BAFF receptors can
be targeted, such as multiple myeloma.”
The researchers showed that these BAFF CAR T cells
are both functional and specific in targeting the three BAFF receptors
expressed by multiple B-cell cancers. They demonstrated robust in vitro and in
vivo cytotoxicity exerted by BAFF CAR T-cells against mantle cell lymphoma,
multiple myeloma and acute lymphoblastic leukaemia xenograft mouse models.
Unlike CAR T products that target CD19, which kill
both early and mature B cells, the BAFF CAR T spares early B cells because
these cells do not express BAFF receptors.
“CD19 CAR T-cell therapy adverse effects include
severe B-cell aplasia, due to pan-B-cell expression of the CD19 marker,” said
Parameswaran. “Unlike CD19 CAR T cells, BAFF CAR T cells designed to target
BAFF receptors may produce less severe B-cell aplasia, as the BAFF receptors
are not expressed by early-stage B-cells. Unaffected early B cells could easily
replenish the mature B-cell population… We are not really anticipating the
B-cell aplasia seen in CD19 therapies.”
An Investigational New Drug (IND) application to the
US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will be filed in the coming weeks and the
team is looking to launch a clinical trial of BAFF CAR T-cell therapy in
patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma in the next several months.