Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells targeting CD19 or CD22 have shown remarkable activity in B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). The major cause of treatment failure is antigen downregulation or loss. Dual antigen targeting could potentially prevent this, but the clinical safety and efficacy of CAR T cells targeting both CD19 and CD22 remain unclear. We conducted a phase 1 trial in pediatric and young adult patients with relapsed or refractory B-ALL (n = 15) to test AUTO3, autologous transduced T cells expressing both anti-CD19 and anti-CD22 CARs (AMELIA trial, EUDRA CT 2016-004680-39). The primary endpoints were the incidence of grade 3–5 toxicity in the dose-limiting toxicity period and the frequency of dose-limiting toxicities. Secondary endpoints included the rate of morphological remission (complete response or complete response with incomplete bone marrow recovery) with minimal residual disease-negative response, as well as the frequency and severity of adverse events, expansion and persistence of AUTO3, duration of B cell aplasia, and overall and event-free survival. The study endpoints were met. AUTO3 showed a favorable safety profile, with no dose-limiting toxicities or cases of AUTO3-related severe cytokine release syndrome or neurotoxicity reported. At 1 month after treatment the remission rate (that is, complete response or complete response with incomplete bone marrow recovery) was 86% (13 of 15 patients). The 1 year overall and event-free survival rates were 60% and 32%, respectively. Relapses were probably due to limited long-term AUTO3 persistence. Strategies to improve CAR T cell persistence are needed to fully realize the potential of dual targeting CAR T cell therapy in B-ALL.
BackgroundRapid access chest pain clinics have facilitated the early diagnosis and treatment of patients with coronary heart disease and angina. Despite this important service provision, coronary heart disease continues to be under-diagnosed and many patients are left untreated and at risk. Recent advances in imaging technology have now led to the widespread use of noninvasive computed tomography, which can be used to measure coronary artery calcium scores and perform coronary angiography in one examination. However, this technology has not been robustly evaluated in its application to the clinic.Methods/designThe SCOT-HEART study is an open parallel group prospective multicentre randomized controlled trial of 4,138 patients attending the rapid access chest pain clinic for evaluation of suspected cardiac chest pain. Following clinical consultation, participants will be approached and randomized 1:1 to receive standard care or standard care plus ≥64-multidetector computed tomography coronary angiography and coronary calcium score. Randomization will be conducted using a web-based system to ensure allocation concealment and will incorporate minimization. The primary endpoint of the study will be the proportion of patients diagnosed with angina pectoris secondary to coronary heart disease at 6 weeks. Secondary endpoints will include the assessment of subsequent symptoms, diagnosis, investigation and treatment. In addition, long-term health outcomes, safety endpoints, such as radiation dose, and health economic endpoints will be assessed. Assuming a clinic rate of 27.0% for the diagnosis of angina pectoris due to coronary heart disease, we will need to recruit 2,069 patients per group to detect an absolute increase of 4.0% in the rate of diagnosis at 80% power and a two-sided P value of 0.05. The SCOT-HEART study is currently recruiting participants and expects to report in 2014.DiscussionThis is the first study to look at the implementation of computed tomography in the patient care pathway that is outcome focused. This study will have major implications for the management of patients with cardiovascular disease.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01149590
The value of graduates in the nursing workforce has been recognised in the move to all-graduate preparation of pre-registration nurses in England ( Nursing and Midwifery Council, 2010 ). Increasingly, after registration continuing professional development programmes for nurses are being offered at Master's level. However, there is limited evidence of the relationship between postgraduate study and improved patient outcomes. Evidence that does exist suggests that nurses who engage in postgraduate study are more likely to have improved critical thinking and decision-making skills, demonstrate leadership qualities to empower them to challenge poor practice, and have the skills needed for advanced clinical practice roles. This article explores these issues and makes recommendations for further work in this area.
Introduction CAR T-cell therapies directed against CD19 or CD22 have shown remarkable activity in r/r B-ALL but relapse due to target antigen down-regulation/loss has been the major cause of treatment failure. To address this, we developed AUTO3, a CAR T-cell therapy designed to target CD19 and CD22 simultaneously. Preliminary results of this study showed an acceptable safety profile and encouraging efficacy in pediatric r/r B-ALL (all 6 patients treated in active doses ≥3 x 106 CAR T-cells/ Kg achieved complete remission (CR) with negative minimal residual disease (MRD) (Amrolia et al, Blood 2018 132:279). Here we present the updated results of CAR naïve patients treated at the active doses. Methods & Patients We constructed a bicistronic retroviral vector encoding both an anti-CD19 CAR and an anti-CD22 CAR. This second-generation CAR incorporated an OX40 co-stimulatory domain for the CD19 CAR and a 41BB for the CD22 CAR. The cell product was manufactured on a semi-automated/closed process. Patients (aged 1‒24 years) with high risk relapsed (IBFM criteria) or refractory B-ALL, adequate performance score/organ function, an absolute lymphocyte count ≥0.5 x 109/L are eligible. Patients with CNS Grade 3 disease, active graft versus host disease are excluded. Patients receive lymphodepletion with 30 mg/m2/day fludarabine x 4 days and 500 mg/m2/day cyclophosphamide x 2 days prior to AUTO3 infusion. Three dose levels were explored (1 x 106, 3 x 106, and 5 x 106 cells/kg), CAR T cells are infused as a single (for <25% blasts) or split (for ≥25% blasts) dose based on leukemia burden. Bridging therapy is allowed during the manufacturing period. The primary endpoint is the frequency of dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) and key secondary endpoints include morphological/MRD negative CR rate, disease-free survival, overall survival, as well as AUTO3 levels and persistence in blood and bone marrow. Results As of the data cut-off date (June 17, 2019), 10 patients received AUTO3 at 3 x 106 cells/Kg (n= 5, of whom 1 received split dose) or 5 x 106 CAR T-cells/Kg (n= 5, all of them received single infusion). The median transduction efficiency was 15.5% (range 8.6‒39.3%). Median age was 8.5 years (range 5‒16 years) and 5 (50%) patients had prior haemopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT). One patient (10%) had prior anti-CD19 CAR-T cells. The disease burden at Day ‒7 ranged from 0 to 38% (median 7.5%) blasts. Among the 10 treated patients, 2 have not completed the 30 days post-infusion DLT observation period as of the cut-off date. No deaths or DLTs were observed. MTD has not yet been reached. The most common grade (Gr) ≥3 adverse events were neutropenia (60%), anaemia (50%), pyrexia (40%), febrile neutropenia (40%) and thrombocytopenia (30%). Eight patients (80%) had Gr 1 cytokine release syndrome (CRS), one (10%) had Gr 2 CRS; no ≥Gr 3 CRS was observed. Only one patient was treated with tocilizumab and none required admission to ICU due to CRS. One patient (10%) experienced Gr 1 neurotoxicity; no ≥ Gr 2 neurotoxicity was reported. Among the 9 CAR naïve patients, 7 (4 in the 3 x 106 cells/Kg dose cohort, 3 in the 5 x 106 cells/Kg dose cohort) had a minimum of 8 weeks' follow up and were evaluable for efficacy analysis. All 7 patients achieved CR/CRi (100%) following AUTO3 infusion as well as molecular negative remission (100%). After a median follow-up of 8 months (range 2-12), emergence of MRD by PCR occurred in four patients, lack of persistence of circulating CAR T-cells was observed in 3 of the 4 patients. Three relapses were reported including one with CD19 negative/CD22 low expression at 1 year after treatment. One patient in ongoing molecular remission proceeded to HSCT. All the remaining 4 patients in ongoing CR/CRi maintain B-cell aplasia. The median CAR T-cell expansion (expressed as vector copy number per microgram of DNA) at peak was 102K (range 56-128). The median persistence of CAR-T cells in blood was 180 days (range 21-330). Updated data with longer follow up and additional patient data will be presented. Conclusion This interim data analysis demonstrates that AUTO3 at ≥3 x 106 cells dose achieved 100% molecular remission rate with a favourable safety profile, no ≥ Gr 3 CRS or ≥ Gr 2 neurotoxicity was reported. The most common cause of relapse was antigen positive relapse due to lack of CAR T cell persistence. Evaluation of patients with a modified manufacturing process is planned. Disclosures Amrolia: UCLB: Patents & Royalties. Clark:Autolus Ltd: Employment, Equity Ownership. Al-Hajj:Autolus Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Cordoba:Autolus: Employment, Equity Ownership. Kotsopoulou:Autolus Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Khokhar:Autolus Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Pule:Autolus: Employment, Equity Ownership, Patents & Royalties. Peddareddigari:Autolus Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership.
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