31 research outputs found

    Ifosfamid, Carboplatin und Etoposid in Kombination mit regionaler Hyperthermie in der Therapie von Anthrazyklin-refraktÀren Weichteilsarkomen

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    Weichteilsarkome (STS) sind seltene maligne Neoplasien, die von bindegewebigen Strukturen wie Fett-, Muskel- oder StĂŒtzgewebe ausgehen und im gesamten Körper auftreten können. Goldstandard der Therapie ist die Resektion aller Manifestationen unter Mitnahme ausreichender SicherheitsabstĂ€nde. Da dies jedoch nicht in allen Patienten möglich ist, wird versucht, durch Verabreichung zytostatischer Substanzen eine Tumormassenreduktion zur erreichen. Dies gelingt mit den vorhandenen Chemotherapeutika mit erwiesener Wirksamkeit, insbesondere Doxorubicin, jedoch nur in etwa einem Drittel aller Patienten. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Anwendung einer regionalen Hyperthermie (RHT) das Ansprechen der Patienten verbessert. Noch anspruchsvoller ist die Therapie von Patienten mit bereits metastasierter, rezidivierender oder Doxorubicin-refraktĂ€rer Erkrankung. Hier ist bislang keine Standardtherapie definiert. Die vorliegende Arbeit evaluiert eine in dieser Situation angewendete Polychemotherapie, bestehend aus Ifosfamid, Carboplatin und Etoposid (ICE) und appliziert in Kombination mit RHT, hinsichtlich ihrer Wirksamkeit und VertrĂ€glichkeit. Zudem wurde die Funktion natĂŒrlicher Killerzellen (NK-Zellen) als an der Kontrolle von Neoplasien beteiligte Effektoren des Immunsystems bei Patienten mit STS untersucht. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass ICE + RHT eine wirksame Therapieoption fĂŒr Patienten mit Anthrazyklin-refraktĂ€rem STS darstellt, und zwar sowohl fĂŒr Patienten mit als auch ohne Fernmetastasen. Remissionen waren in 13% der Patienten nachweisbar, ĂŒberwiegend konnte eine Krankheitsstabilisierung erreicht werden. Die Therapie ist jedoch assoziiert mit einer höhergradigen hĂ€matologischen ToxizitĂ€t und febrilen Komplikationen in einem signifikanten Anteil der Patienten, so dass ICE + RHT nur ausgewĂ€hlten Patienten in gutem Allgemeinzustand verabreicht werden sollte. Die lytische Funktion der NK-Zellen war noch vor Beginn einer Therapie bei Patienten mit Erstdiagnose eines STS sowie bei Patienten mit Anthrazyklin- refraktĂ€rem STS signifikant reduziert im Vergleich zu gesunden Probanden. WĂ€hrend der Therapie mit ICE + RHT zeigte sich keine Zunahme dieser Funktion. Durch Inkubation der Zellen mit Interleukin 2 und TKD, einem Hitzeschockprotein- Derivat mit NK-stimulierenden Eigenschaften, konnte die Funktion in vitro wiederhergestellt werden. Die Augmentation der NK-Zell-Funktion könnte in Zukunft von therapeutischem Nutzen fĂŒr Patienten mit STS sein

    Inferior Outcomes of EU Versus US Patients Treated With CD19 CAR-T for Relapsed/Refractory Large B-cell Lymphoma: Association With Differences in Tumor Burden, Systemic Inflammation, Bridging Therapy Utilization, and CAR-T Product Use

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    B-cell lymphoma; Tumor burden; Systemic inflammationLinfoma de cĂ©lulas B; Carga tumoral; InflamaciĂłn sistĂ©micaLimfoma de cĂšl·lules B; CĂ rrega tumoral; InflamaciĂł sistĂšmicaReal-world evidence suggests a trend toward inferior survival of patients receiving CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy in Europe (EU) and with tisagenlecleucel. The underlying logistic, patient- and disease-related reasons for these discrepancies remain poorly understood. In this multicenter retrospective observational study, we studied the patient-individual journey from CAR-T indication to infusion, baseline features, and survival outcomes in 374 patients treated with tisagenlecleucel (tisa-cel) or axicabtagene-ciloleucel (axi-cel) in EU and the United States (US). Compared with US patients, EU patients had prolonged indication-to-infusion intervals (66 versus 50 d; P < 0.001) and more commonly received intermediary therapies (holding and/or bridging therapy, 94% in EU versus 74% in US; P < 0.001). Baseline lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) (median 321 versus 271 U/L; P = 0.02) and ferritin levels (675 versus 425 ng/mL; P = 0.004) were significantly elevated in the EU cohort. Overall, we observed inferior survival in EU patients (median progression-free survival [PFS] 3.1 versus 9.2 months in US; P < 0.001) and with tisa-cel (3.2 versus 9.2 months with axi-cel; P < 0.001). On multivariate Lasso modeling, nonresponse to bridging, elevated ferritin, and increased C-reactive protein represented independent risks for treatment failure. Weighing these variables into a patient-individual risk balancer (high risk [HR] balancer), we found higher levels in EU versus US and tisa-cel versus axi-cel cohorts. Notably, superior PFS with axi-cel was exclusively evident in patients at low risk for progression (according to the HR balancer), but not in high-risk patients. These data demonstrate that inferior survival outcomes in EU patients are associated with longer time-to-infusion intervals, higher tumor burden/LDH levels, increased systemic inflammatory markers, and CAR-T product use.This work was supported by a Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) research grant provided within the Sonderforschungbereich SFB-TRR 388/1 2021 – 452881907, and DFG research grant 451580403 (to MS). The work was further supported by the Bavarian Elite Graduate Training Network (to MS), the Wilhelm-Sander Stiftung (to MS, project no. 2018.087.1), the Else-Kröner-Fresenius Stiftung (to MS), the Bavarian Center for Cancer Research (BZKF), and NCI Cancer Center Support Grant P30 CA076292. VLB, KR, and VB were funded by the Else-Kröner Forschungskolleg (EKFK) within the Munich Clinician Scientist Program (MCSP)

    Safety and feasibility of stem cell boost as a salvage therapy for severe hematotoxicity after CD19 CAR T-cell therapy

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    Stem cell; Hematotoxicity; T-cellCĂ©lulas madre; Hematotoxicidad; CĂ©lulas TCĂšl·lules mare; Hematotoxicitat; CĂšl·lules TThis work was supported by a fellowship from School of Oncology of German Cancer Consortium (DKTK) (K.R.) and was funded by the Else Kröner Forschungskolleg; a Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG; German Research Foundation) research grant provided within the Sonderforschungbereich (SFB-TRR 388/1 2021–452881907) and DFG research grant (451580403) (M.S.); the Bavarian Elite Graduate Training Network (M.S.), the Wilhelm-Sander Stiftung (project no. 2018.087.1) (M.S.), the Else-Kröner-Fresenius Stiftung (M.S., K.R., V. BĂŒcklein, V. Blumenberg), and the Bavarian Center for Cancer Research (BZKF)

    Severe hematotoxicity after CD19 CAR-T therapy is associated with suppressive immune dysregulation and limited CAR-T expansion

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    Hematotoxicity; Suppressive immune dysregulationHematotoxicidad; DesregulaciĂłn inmunesupresoraHematotoxicitat; DesregulaciĂł immunesupressoraProlonged cytopenias after chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy are a significant clinical problem and the underlying pathophysiology remains poorly understood. Here, we investigated how (CAR) T cell expansion dynamics and serum proteomics affect neutrophil recovery phenotypes after CD19-directed CAR T cell therapy. Survival favored patients with “intermittent” neutrophil recovery (e.g., recurrent neutrophil dips) compared to either “quick” or “aplastic” recovery. While intermittent patients displayed increased CAR T cell expansion, aplastic patients exhibited an unfavorable relationship between expansion and tumor burden. Proteomics of patient serum collected at baseline and in the first month after CAR-T therapy revealed higher markers of endothelial dysfunction, inflammatory cytokines, macrophage activation, and T cell suppression in the aplastic phenotype group. Prolonged neutrophil aplasia thus occurs in patients with systemic immune dysregulation at baseline with subsequently impaired CAR-T expansion and myeloid-related inflammatory changes. The association between neutrophil recovery and survival outcomes highlights critical interactions between host hematopoiesis and the immune state stimulated by CAR-T infusion.K.Rej. received a fellowship from the School of Oncology of the German Cancer Consortium (DKTK) and was funded by the Else Kröner Forschungskolleg (EKFK) within the Munich Clinician Scientist Program (MCSP). This work was supported by a grant within the Gilead Research Scholar Program (to K.Rej. and M.S.), the Bruno & Helene Jöster Foundation (to K.R., M.S.), and by a Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) research grant provided within the Sonderforschungbereich SFB-TRR 338/1 2021 – 452881907 and DFG research grant 451580403 (to M.S.). The work was further supported by the Bavarian Elite Graduate Training Network (to M.S.), the Wilhelm-Sander Stiftung (to M.S., project no. 2018.087.1), the Else-Kröner-Fresenius Stiftung (to M.S.), and the Bavarian Cancer Research Center (BZKF)

    The PI3K∂-Selective Inhibitor Idelalisib Induces T- and NK-Cell Dysfunction Independently of B-Cell Malignancy-Associated Immunosuppression

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    B-cell receptors, multiple receptor tyrosine kinases, and downstream effectors are constitutively active in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) B cells. Activation of these pathways results in resistance to apoptosis and enhanced survival of the leukemic cells. Idelalisib is a highly selective inhibitor of the PI3K p110∂ isoform and is approved for the treatment of CLL in patients with relapsed/refractory disease or in those harboring 17p deletions or tp53 mutations. Despite the initial excitement centered around high response rates in clinical trials of idelalisib, its therapeutic success has been hindered by the incidence of severe opportunistic infections. To examine the potential contribution of idelalisib to the increased risk of infection, we investigated the effects of idelalisib on the immune cell compartments of healthy donors (HDs) and CLL patients. PI3K∂ blockade by idelalisib reduced the expression levels of inhibitory checkpoint molecules in T cells isolated from both HDs and CLL patients. In addition, the presence of idelalisib in cultures significantly decreased T-cell-mediated cytotoxicity and granzyme B secretion, as well as cytokine secretion levels in both cohorts. Furthermore, idelalisib reduced the proliferation and cytotoxicity of HD NK cells. Collectively, our data demonstrate that both human T and NK cells are highly sensitive to PI3K∂ inhibition. Idelalisib interfered with the functions of T and NK cell cells from both HDs and CLL patients. Therefore, idelalisib might contribute to an increased risk of infections regardless of the underlying B-cell malignancy

    Integrated multiomic approach for identification of novel immunotherapeutic targets in AML

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    Background Immunotherapy of acute myeloid leukemia has experienced considerable advances, however novel target antigens continue to be sought after. To this end, unbiased approaches for surface protein detection are limited and integration with other data types, such as gene expression and somatic mutational burden, are poorly utilized. The Cell Surface Capture technology provides an unbiased, discovery-driven approach to map the surface proteins on cells of interest. Yet, direct utilization of primary patient samples has been limited by the considerable number of viable cells needed. Methods Here, we optimized the Cell Surface Capture protocol to enable direct interrogation of primary patient samples and applied our optimized protocol to a set of samples from patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) to generate the AML surfaceome. We then further curated this AML surfaceome to exclude antigens expressed on healthy tissues and integrated mutational burden data from hematologic cancers to further enrich for targets which are likely to be essential to leukemia biology. Finally, we validated our findings in a separate cohort of AML patient samples. Results Our protocol modifications allowed us to double the yield in identified proteins and increased the specificity from 54 to 80.4% compared to previous approaches. Using primary AML patient samples, we were able to identify a total of 621 surface proteins comprising the AML surfaceome. We integrated this data with gene expression and mutational burden data to curate a set of robust putative target antigens. Seventy-six proteins were selected as potential candidates for further investigation of which we validated the most promising novel candidate markers, and identified CD148, ITGA4 and Integrin beta-7 as promising targets in AML. Integrin beta-7 showed the most promising combination of expression in patient AML samples, and low or absent expression on healthy hematopoietic tissue. Conclusion Taken together, we demonstrate the feasibility of a highly optimized surfaceome detection method to interrogate the entire AML surfaceome directly from primary patient samples and integrate this data with gene expression and mutational burden data to achieve a robust, multiomic target identification platform. This approach has the potential to accelerate the unbiased target identification for immunotherapy of AML

    Neoadjuvant or adjuvant sirolimus for malignant metastatic or locally advanced perivascular epithelioid cell tumors: two case reports

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    Perivascular epithelioid cell tumors (PEComas) are very rare mesenchymal tumors, characterized by the presence of perivascular epithelioid cells. Despite their often benign nature, malignant variants with a locally aggressive growth pattern and even distant metastases are known. We describe two cases of malignant PEComas. The first patient had an extensive peritoneal spread and a history of multiple resections, and received the mechanistic target of rapamycin inhibitor sirolimus in a postoperative setting as maintenance therapy. The second patient presented with locally advanced disease in the iliac fossa and was treated with sirolimus in a neoadjuvant setting and achieved complete remission. Both patients have been under treatment for 18 and 52 months, respectively, and are currently in complete remission. These two cases indicate that mechanistic target of rapamycin inhibition for malignant PEComas could be a safe and successful treatment strategy in a neoadjuvant setting with an acceptable toxicity profile

    The CAR-HEMATOTOX risk-stratifies patients for severe infections and disease progression after CD19 CAR-T in R/R LBCL

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    Hematologic neoplasms; Receptors; Chimeric antigenNeoplasias hematolĂłgicas; Receptores; AntĂ­geno quimĂ©ricoNeoplĂ sies hematolĂČgiques; Receptors; Antigen quimĂšricBackground CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy (CAR-T) represents a promising treatment modality for an increasing number of B-cell malignancies. However, prolonged cytopenias and infections substantially contribute to the toxicity burden of CAR-T. The recently developed CAR-HEMATOTOX (HT) score—composed of five pre-lymphodepletion variables (eg, absolute neutrophil count, platelet count, hemoglobin, C-reactive protein, ferritin)—enables risk stratification of hematological toxicity. Methods In this multicenter retrospective analysis, we characterized early infection events (days 0–90) and clinical outcomes in 248 patients receiving standard-of-care CD19 CAR-T for relapsed/refractory large B-cell lymphoma. This included a derivation cohort (cohort A, 179 patients) and a second independent validation cohort (cohort B, 69 patients). Cumulative incidence curves were calculated for all-grade, grade ≄3, and specific infection subtypes. Clinical outcomes were studied via Kaplan-Meier estimates. Results In a multivariate analysis adjusted for other baseline features, the HT score identified patients at high risk for severe infections (adjusted HR 6.4, 95% CI 3.1 to 13.1). HThigh patients more frequently developed severe infections (40% vs 8%, p<0.0001)—particularly severe bacterial infections (27% vs 0.9%, p<0.0001). Additionally, multivariate analysis of post-CAR-T factors revealed that infection risk was increased by prolonged neutropenia (≄14 days) and corticosteroid use (≄9 days), and decreased with fluoroquinolone prophylaxis. Antibacterial prophylaxis significantly reduced the likelihood of severe bacterial infections in HThigh (16% vs 46%, p<0.001), but not HTlow patients (0% vs 2%, p=n.s.). Collectively, HThigh patients experienced worse median progression-free (3.4 vs 12.6 months) and overall survival (9.1 months vs not-reached), and were hospitalized longer (median 20 vs 16 days). Severe infections represented the most common cause of non-relapse mortality after CAR-T and were associated with poor survival outcomes. A trend toward increased non-relapse mortality in HThigh patients was observed (8.0% vs 3.7%, p=0.09). Conclusions These data demonstrate the utility of the HT score to risk-stratify patients for infectious complications and poor survival outcomes prior to CD19 CAR-T. High-risk patients likely benefit from anti-infective prophylaxis and should be closely monitored for potential infections and relapse.This work was supported by a Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) research grant provided within the Sonderforschungbereich SFB-TRR 388/1 2021-452881907, and DFG research grant 451580403 (to MS). The work was further supported by the Bavarian Elite Graduate Training Network (to MS), the Wilhelm-Sander Stiftung (to MS, project no. 20180871), the Else-Kröner-Fresenius Stiftung (to MS), and the Bavarian Center for Cancer Research (BZKF)

    Lymphoma tumor burden before chimeric antigen receptor T-Cell treatment: RECIL vs. Lugano vs. metabolic tumor assessment

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    Purpose: High tumor burden has emerged as a negative predictor of efficacy in chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy (CART) in patients with refractory or relapsed large B-cell lymphoma. This study analyzed the deviation among imaging-based tumor burden (TB) metrics and their association with progression-free (PFS) and overall survival (OS). Materials and methods: In this single-center observational study, we included all consecutively treated patients receiving CD19 CART with available baseline PET-CT imaging. Imaging-based TB was determined based on response evaluation criteria in lymphoma (RECIL), the Lugano criteria, and metabolic tumor volume. Total, nodal and extranodal TB were represented, according to the respective criteria, by sum of longest diameters (TBRECIL), sum of product of perpendicular diameters (TBLugano), and metabolic tumor volume (TBMTV). Correlation statistics were used for comparison. Proportional Cox regression analysis studied the association of TB metrics with PFS and OS. Results: 34 consecutive patients were included (median age: 67 years, 41% female) with total median baseline TBRECIL of 12.5 cm, TBLugano of 4,030 mm2 and TBMTV of 330 mL. The correlation of TBRECIL and TBLugano with TBMTV was strong (ρ=0.744, p50% (HR=2.915, p=0.042), whereas total TBRECIL>50% and total TBLugano>50% were not significant (both p>0.05). None of the total TB metrics were associated with OS (all p>0.05). Conclusion: Pre-CART TB metrics vary significantly based on the assessment method, impacting their association with survival outcomes. The correlation between TBRECIL, TBLugano and TBMTV was influenced by disease phenotype and prior bridging therapy. TB method of assessment must be considered when interpreting the impact of TB on outcomes in clinical trials. Considering the heterogeneity, our results argue for standardization and harmonization across centers
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