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Sneha Ramakrishna, Anna Geraghty, Zinaida Good, Moksha Desai, Rebecca Mancusi, Jasia Mahdi, Kun Wei Song, Zachary Ehlinger, Yiyun Chen, Mark Hamilton, Skyler Rietberg, Robbie Majzner, Liora Schultz, Becky Richards, Jennifer Kamens, Vali Barsan, Cynthia Campen, Sonia Partap, Jennifer Moon, Christina Baggott, Michael Kunick, Michelle Fujimoto, Amy Li, Sneha Jariwala, Sharon Mavroukakis, Emily Egeler, Ashley Jacobs, Courtney Erickson, Snehit Prabhu, Kara Davis, Steven Feldman, Bita Sahaf, Crystal Mackall, Michelle Monje, IMMU-60. MYELOID POPULATIONS MODULATE GD2 CAR T CELL ACTIVITY IN DIFFUSE MIDLINE GLIOMA, Neuro-Oncology, Volume 26, Issue Supplement_8, November 2024, Page viii166, https://doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noae165.0652
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Abstract
H3K27M-mutated diffuse midline gliomas (DMGs) are universally lethal cancers in children and young adults. Our team previously demonstrated efficacy of GD2-targeting chimeric antigen receptor T cells (GD2-CAR T-cells) in preclinical models of DMG of the pons (also called diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) and DMG of the spinal cord, and opened a Phase I clinical trial (NCT04196413) treating patients with first intravenous (IV) followed by repeated infusions of intracerebroventricular (ICV) GD2-CAR T-cells. We employed high-dimensional analyses to define immune states contributing to CAR-T activity in patients. Single cell RNA-sequencing (scRNAseq) was conducted on 555,406 single cells from 115 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples of 13 patients before and after CAR-T treatment. This is the largest CSF CAR-T dataset in central nervous system (CNS) tumors and provides insights into the immune biology surrounding CAR-T treatment for CNS malignancies. Patient CSF samples were dominated by T cell and myeloid populations. After CAR-T infusion, patient CSF exhibited an increased fraction of regulatory T cells and myeloid populations from baseline. Myeloid cells in early timepoints after ICV administration demonstrated a unique pro-inflammatory signature, while CSF samples from IV and late ICV timepoints exhibited a suppressive signature. To further explore the immune biology of these myeloid contributors, we developed a patient-derived xenograft model of DMG relapse following low-dose ICV GD2 CAR-T treatment. Using a pharmacological CSF1R-inhibitor, we demonstrate that depletion of microglia/myeloid cells at a specific window following CAR-T administration enhances durability of tumor control. Together, these data display the power of in-depth correlative analyses to identify distinct immune populations that drive durability of response. Key findings from these data will allow for optimization of CAR-T therapies for H3K27M+ DMG patients, providing hope to shift the paradigm of this fatal disease.
- mutation
- cancer
- central nervous system
- child
- phase 1 clinical trials
- data display
- glioma
- microglia
- myeloid cells
- pons
- geographic population
- macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor
- sequence analysis, rna
- t-lymphocytes
- transplantation, heterologous
- cerebrospinal fluid
- neoplasms
- pharmacology
- spinal cord
- regulatory t-lymphocytes
- young adult
- infusion procedures
- chimeric antigen receptors
- datasets
- chimeric antigen receptor t-cell therapy
- diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma
- malignant central nervous system neoplasms