Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy is a promising treatment for patients with CD19+ B-cell malignancies. Combination strategies that improve CAR T-cell potency, limit tumor environment–mediated immune dysfunction, and directly reduce tumor burden may increase the potential for durable clinical benefit of CAR T-cell therapy. Lisocabtagene maraleucel (liso-cel) is a product therapy candidate being tested in patients with relapsed/refractory non-Hodgkin lymphoma or chronic lymphocytic leukemia. This study assessed the in vitro and in vivo functionality of CAR T cells transduced to express the anti-CD19 CAR of liso-cel in combination with ibrutinib or acalabrutinib. In prolonged stimulation assays, the presence of ibrutinib or acalabrutinib improved the CAR T-cell effector function. RNA-Seq analysis and surface marker profiling of these CAR T cells treated with ibrutinib but not acalabrutinib revealed gene expression changes consistent with skewing toward a memory-like, type 1 T-helper, Bruton tyrosine kinase phenotype. Ibrutinib or acalabrutinib improved CD19+ tumor clearance and prolonged survival of tumor-bearing mice when used in combination with CAR T cells. A combination of the defined cell product therapy candidate, liso-cel, with ibrutinib or acalabrutinib is an attractive approach that may potentiate the promising clinical responses already achieved in CD19+ B-cell malignancies with each of these single agents.
Anti-B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA) chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have shown promising clinical responses in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma. Lenalidomide, an immunomodulatory drug, potentiates T cell functionality, drives antimyeloma activity, and alters the suppressive microenvironment; these properties may effectively combine with anti-BCMA CAR T cells to enhance function. Using an anti-BCMA CAR T, we demonstrated that lenalidomide enhances CAR T cell function in a concentration-dependent manner. Lenalidomide increased CAR T effector cytokine production, particularly under low CAR stimulation or in the presence of inhibitory ligand programmed cell death 1 ligand 1. Notably, lenalidomide also enhanced CAR T cytokine production, cytolytic activity, and activation profile relative to untreated CAR T cells in chronic stimulation assays. This unique potentiation of both short-term CAR T activity and long-term functionality during chronic stimulation prompted investigation of the molecular profile of lenalidomide-treated CAR T cells. Signatures from RNA sequencing and assay for transposase-accessible chromatin using sequencing indicated that pathways associated with T-helper 1 response, cytokine production, T cell activation, cell-cycle control, and cytoskeletal remodeling were altered with lenalidomide. Finally, study of lenalidomide and anti-BCMA CAR T cells in a murine, disseminated, multiple myeloma model indicated that lenalidomide increased CAR T cell counts in blood and significantly prolonged animal survival. In summary, preclinical studies demonstrated that lenalidomide potentiated CAR T activity in vivo in low-antigen or suppressive environments and delayed onset of functional exhaustion. These results support further investigation of lenalidomide and anti-BCMA CAR T cells in the clinic.
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) drives systemic immune suppression and T cell dysfunction in patients, highlighting an important consideration in this setting for the manufacturing and efficacy of adoptive cell therapies using autologous T cells. In clinical studies, anti-CD19 CAR-T cells produce durable and complete responses in leukemic and some lymphomatous B cell malignancies. While preconditioning with cyclophosphamide (Cy) and fludarabine (Flu) has improved CAR-T responses in CLL patients, reported complete response rates still have been below 50%; additional therapeutic strategies likely will be required. Ibrutinib, an irreversible inhibitor of BTK, has been approved as a frontline treatment option for patients with CLL. The potent off-BTK activity of ibrutinib on ITK and TEC family kinases could affect CAR T cell biology. Recent work highlighted the ability of ibrutinib to restore CLL patient T cell functionality, enhance CAR-T production and potentially improve clinical efficacy. Additional preclinical work demonstrated improved tumor clearance when anti-CD19 CAR T cells were combined with ibrutinib in several murine tumor models. A preclinical evaluation of the combination between the anti-CD19 CAR-T product, JCAR017, and ibrutinib was performed to determine feasibility for clinical use in CLL. JCAR017 is a second generation CAR-T cell product candidate that contains a 41BB costimulatory endo-domain and is currently in phase 1 trials for non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). A series of in vitro studies assessed the functional activity of JCAR017 cells (derived from 3 healthy donors), in combination with ibrutinib (500-0.05nM), across a dose range covering the cMax and cMin. Cytolytic activity was monitored by co-culturing CAR-T cells with ibrutinib-resistant K562 CD19 tumor cells at an effector-to-target ratio of 2.5:1. Ibrutinib, at concentrations tested, did not inhibit the cytolytic function of JCAR017 cells. For cells derived from some donors, addition of ibrutinib appeared to increase % target killing. To address ibrutinib effects on JCAR017 activation, cell surface markers and cytokines were tracked over 4 days following stimulation with irradiated K562 CD19 cells. We observed no significant effect on JCAR017 surface expression of CD25, CD38, CD39, CD95, CD62L, CCR7, or CD45RO, or of EGFRt, a surrogate transduction marker. With addition of ibrutinib, we observed a modest decrease in the percentage of cells expressing CD69, CD107a and PD-1. With 5 and 50nM of ibrutinib, there was a 19.5% (p<0.01) average increase in IFNγ production. At supraphysiological concentrations (500nM) we observed a 20% (p<0.05) decrease in IL-2 production, suggesting ibrutinib at high concentrations may dampen T cell activation. CAR-T cell expansion after repeated antigen stimulation has been shown to be a predictor of in vivo efficacy. JCAR017 cells stimulated every 3-4 days with irradiated target cells in the presence of ibrutinib showed no inhibition of initial growth. However, after 5 rounds of stimulation, JCAR017 + ibrutinib cells from 1 donor had enhanced proliferation compared to control, untreated cells (p<0.05). Interestingly, after 5 rounds of serial stimulation, we observed an increased proportion of CD4+CXCR3+CRTh2- Th1 cells with 500nM ibrutinib treatment compared to control (p<0.01). We assessed the in vivo anti-tumor activity of JCAR017 in combination with ibrutinib using NSG mice injected with 5x105 Nalm6-luciferase cells. After tumor engraftment, a suboptimal dose (5x105) of JCAR017 cells was transferred to mice and ibrutinib (25 mg/kg qd) was administered for the duration of the study. Ibrutinib treatment alone had no effect on tumor burden compared to vehicle treatment. Mice treated with a suboptimal JCAR017 dose + ibrutinib showed decreased tumor burden (p<0.05) and increased median survival from 44 days to >80 days (p<0.001) compared to the group receiving the suboptimal JCAR017 dose + vehicle. Similar effects were seen in replicate studies using JCAR017 cells produced from multiple donors. Ex vivo evaluation for CAR-T quantitation and immunophenotyping was also performed. Taken together, the results suggest that ibrutinib enhances intrinsic JCAR017 activity and may improve outcomes in CLL patients treated with anti-CD19 CAR T therapy, irrespective of BTK mutational status. A Phase 1b study of JCAR017 in combination with ibrutinib for BTKi R/R CLL is planned. Disclosures Qin: Juno Therapeutics: Employment. Baturevych:Juno Therapeutics: Employment. Mudri:Juno Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Salmon:Juno Therapeutics: Employment. Ports:Juno Therapeutics: Employment.
<p>Supplementary Figure 2 shows the effect of lenalidomide on BCMA expression of the cell lines used in the experiments in this manuscript.</p>
<p>Supplementary Methods and Figure Legends</p>
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