41BB-based and CD28-based CD123-redirected T-cells ablate human normal hematopoiesis in vivo

Author

Libero Baroni, Matteo

Sánchez Martínez, Diego

Gutiérrez-Agüera, Francisco

Roca Ho, Heleia

Castellà, Maria

Zanetti, S. R

Velasco-Hernández, Talia

Díaz de la Guardia, Rafael

Castaño Cardoso, Julio

Anguita, Eduardo

Vives Polo, Susana

Nomdedéu, Josep

Lapillone, Helene

Bras, Anne E.

van der Velden, Vincent H. J.

Junca, Jordi

Marin, Pedro

Bataller, Alex

Esteve Reyner, Jordi

Vick, Binje

Jeremias, Irmela

Lopez, Angel

Sorigue, Marc

Bueno, Clara

Menéndez Bujan, Pablo

Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Publication date

2020

Abstract

Altres ajuts: We thank CERCA/Generalitat de Catalunya and Fundació Josep Carreras-Obra Social la Caixa for their institutional support. PM acknowledges financial support from theSpanish Cancer Research Association (AECC-Semilla19), the Fundación Uno entre Cienmil, the Obra Social La Caixa (LCF/PR/HR19/52160011), the Leo Messi Foundation, the Banco Santander Foundation and the "Heroes hasta la médula" initiative.


BACKGROUND: Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a hematopoietic malignancy which is biologically, phenotypically and genetically very heterogeneous. Outcome of patients with AML remains dismal, highlighting the need for improved, less toxic therapies. Chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CART) immunotherapies for patients with refractory or relapse (R/R) AML are challenging because of the absence of a universal pan-AML target antigen and the shared expression of target antigens with normal hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs), which may lead to life-threating on-target/off-tumor cytotoxicity. CD33-redirected and CD123-redirected CARTs for AML are in advanced preclinical and clinical development, and they exhibit robust antileukemic activity. However, preclinical and clinical controversy exists on whether such CARTs are myeloablative. METHODS: We set out to comparatively characterize in vitro and in vivo the efficacy and safety of 41BB-based and CD28-based CARCD123. We analyzed 97 diagnostic and relapse AML primary samples to investigate whether CD123 is a suitable immunotherapeutic target, and we used several xenograft models and in vitro assays to assess the myeloablative potential of our second-generation CD123 CARTs. RESULTS: Here, we show that CD123 represents a bona fide target for AML and show that both 41BB-based and CD28-based CD123 CARTs are very efficient in eliminating both AML cell lines and primary cells in vitro and in vivo. However, both 41BB-based and CD28-based CD123 CARTs ablate normal human hematopoiesis and prevent the establishment of de novo hematopoietic reconstitution by targeting both immature and myeloid HSPCs. CONCLUSIONS: This study calls for caution when clinically implementing CD123 CARTs, encouraging its preferential use as a bridge to allo-HSCT in patients with R/R AML.

Document Type

Article

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

T lymphocytes; Cell engineering; Immunotherapy, adoptive

Publisher

 

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Rights

open access

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