The activity of anti-CD19 CAR T cell therapy in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) with Richter's transformation (RT) to aggressive large B cell lymphoma (LBCL) is largely unknown. In a multicenter ...retrospective study, we report the safety and efficacy of CAR T cell therapy in patients with RT (n=30) compared to patients with aggressive B cell lymphoma (n=283) and patients with transformed indolent Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma (iNHL) (n=141) between April 2016 and January 2023. Two-thirds of patients received prior therapy for CLL before RT and 89% of them received B-cell receptor and B-cell lymphoma 2 (BCL-2) inhibitors. Toxicities of CAR T cell therapy in RT were similar to other lymphomas, with no fatalities related to cytokine release syndrome or immune effector-cell associated neurotoxicity synderome. The 100-day overall response rate and complete response rates in patients with RT were 57% and 47%, respectively. With a median follow up of 19 months, the median overall survival (OS) was 9.9 months in patients with RT compared to 18 months in de-novo LBCL and not reached in patients with transformed iNHL. The OS at 12 months was 45% in patients with RT compared with 62% and 75% in patients with de novo LBCL and transformed iNHL, respectively. In a multivariate analysis, worse OS was associated with RT histology, elevated LDH, and more prior lines of therapy. CAR T cell therapy can salvage a proportion of patients with CLL and RT exposed to prior targeted agents; however, efficacy in RT is inferior compared to de novo LBCL and transformed iNHL
Patients with relapsed/refractory follicular lymphoma (R/R-FL) often require multiple treatment lines. We performed a phase 1b/2 single-center clinical trial of autologous point-of-care anti-CD19 ...chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells in R/R-FL patients treated patients with ≥ 2 treatment lines. All 26 patients enrolled received CAR T-cell infusion at a median of 11 days after leukapheresis. Seventy-seven percent of patients had POD24. At enrollment, disease stage was III-IV in 85% of the patients, 77% had high-risk FLIPI score, and 77% had progressive disease. Grade III-IV cytokine release and immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndromes occurred in 12% and 16% of the patients, respectively. Overall response rate at 1-month was 88%. The median follow-up was 15.4 months. One-year overall and progression-free survival were 100% and 63%, respectively. In conclusion, point-of-care CAR T-cell, manufactured within 11 days, induced a high response rate with an acceptable safety profile in patients with high-risk R/R-FL.
Chimeric antigen receptor T‐cells (CAR‐T) are widely used for the treatment of relapsed/refractory diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL). The data for CAR‐T cell therapy in patients with extra‐nodal ...(EN) lymphoma is restricted. We included 126 consecutive patients with DLBCL treated with commercially available CAR‐T cells (tisagenlecleucel, n = 100, 79.4% and axicabtagene ciloleucel, n = 26, 20.6%). At lymphodepletion, 72 of 126 (57%) patients had EN disease, 42 of 126 (33%) patients had nodal disease (ND)‐only and 12 of 126 (10%) showed no disease assessed by PET‐CT. There were no significant differences in CAR‐T related toxicities and in the median Progression free survival (PFS) between EN patients and ND (10.76 95% CI: 7.8–13.6 vs. 14.1 95% CI: 10–18.1 months, p = .126). Similarly, median overall survival (OS) was not significantly different (15.36 95% CI 12.5–18.2 vs. 18.4 95% CI 14.8–22.1 months, p = .100). Subgroup analysis according to the number of EN involved sites showed that median PFS and OS were significantly higher in patients with <3 EN sites (12.3 months 95% CI 9–15.5 vs. 4.28 months 95% CI 0.6–7.9, p = .010) compared to patients with >2 EN sites, respectively (16.5 months 95% CI 13.4–19.6 vs. 8.7 months 95% CI 4.6–12.8, p = .05). In multivariate cox regression analysis, increased number sites of EN disease and high lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) at lymphodepletion negatively impacted PFS (p = .021 and <.001, respectively), while sex, type of product administered, age and performance status did not predict PFS and OS. Of note, all the patients with involvement of gastrointestinal tract (n = 9), urinary tract (n = 9), or pharynx (n = 3) at lymphodepletion, progressed or had an early relapse. In conclusions, patients with >2 EN sites at lymphodepletion have significantly worse clinical outcomes compared to patients with <3 EN sites. Patients with specific sites of EN disease may demonstrate grim prognosis.