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Phase 1 Results of ZUMA-1: A Multicenter Study of KTE-C19 Anti-CD19 CAR T Cell Therapy in Refractory Aggressive Lymphoma.

Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy2017IF: 6.9

Locke Frederick L, Neelapu Sattva S, Bartlett Nancy L, Siddiqi Tanya, Chavez Julio C, Hosing Chitra M, Ghobadi Armin, Budde Lihua E, Bot Adrian, Rossi John M, Jiang Yizhou, Xue Allen X, Elias Meg, Aycock Jeff, Wiezorek Jeff, Go William Y

PMID: 28129122View on PubMed

Abstract

Outcomes for patients with refractory diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) are poor. In the multicenter ZUMA-1 phase 1 study, we evaluated KTE-C19, an autologous CD3ζ/CD28-based chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy, in patients with refractory DLBCL. Patients received low-dose conditioning chemotherapy with concurrent cyclophosphamide (500 mg/m) and fludarabine (30 mg/m) for 3 days followed by KTE-C19 at a target dose of 2 × 10CAR T cells/kg. The incidence of dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) was the primary endpoint. Seven patients were treated with KTE-C19 and one patient experienced a DLT of grade 4 cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and neurotoxicity. Grade ≥3 CRS and neurotoxicity were observed in 14% (n = 1/7) and 57% (n = 4/7) of patients, respectively. All other KTE-C19-related grade ≥3 events resolved within 1 month. The overall response rate was 71% (n = 5/7) and complete response (CR) rate was 57% (n = 4/7). Three patients have ongoing CR (all at 12+ months). CAR T cells demonstrated peak expansion within 2 weeks and continued to be detectable at 12+ months in patients with ongoing CR. This regimen of KTE-C19 was safe for further study in phase 2 and induced durable remissions in patients with refractory DLBCL.

Specialty

Hematology Oncology

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