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Rebecca Ronsley, Kristy Seidel, Prabha Narayanaswamy, Sowmya Pattabhi, Jason Wendler, On Ho, Stephanie Rawlings-Rhea, Juliane Gust, Wenjun Huang, Erin Crotty, Sarah Leary, Daniel Runco, Jason Hauptman, Rebecca Gardner, Julie Park, Colleen Annesley, Michael Jensen, Nicholas Vitanza, CTIM-02. PIONEERING QUAD-TARGETING CAR T CELL THERAPY IN PEDIATRIC CNS TUMORS – ANALYSIS FROM THE INITIAL PATIENTS TREATED ON THE FIRST-IN-HUMAN PHASE 1 TRIAL BRAINCHILD-04, Neuro-Oncology, Volume 26, Issue Supplement_8, November 2024, Page viii84, https://doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noae165.0336
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Abstract
BrainChild-04 is a first-in-human clinical trial of quad-chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy for children and young adults with central nervous system (CNS) tumors. This trial administers repeated locoregional CAR T cells targeting B7-H3, EGFR, HER2, and IL-13Ralpha2 (“quad-CAR T cells”), leveraging multi-antigen targeting to address the tumor heterogeneity of high-grade CNS tumors.
The primary endpoints are feasibility and safety, and secondary endpoints are disease response and correlative studies of CAR T cell activity. The trial utilized a Bayesian Optimal Interval (BOIN) statistical design with three planned dose regimens(DR). There are 2 arms with weekly delivery for 3 weeks of a 4-week cycle:(A) –diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG), (B) –non-pontine diffuse midline glioma (DMG) or other relapsed CNS tumors.
Enrolled patients include DMG N=6, DIPG N=5, other CNS tumors N=4. Of the 15 enrolled patients, 7 have been infused with 8 awaiting infusions. A total of 33 intracranial CAR T doses have been delivered, including Arm A DR 1 (N=1), Arm B DR 1 (N=3), DR2 (N=3). The most common adverse events have been grade 1-2 fever (7/7 patients), grade 1-3 headache (6/7), and grade 1-2 nausea/vomiting (6/7). There have been no DLTs and no cytokine release syndrome (CRS) or immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity (ICANS). CTCAE and tumor inflammation-associated neurotoxicity are both being captured. All treated patients are alive with median follow up time post-initial infusion of 93(14-198) days. CAR T cells were detected by flow cytometric analysis of CSF post-infusion in 14/24 CSF samples. Radiographic response, CSF circulating tumor DNA, targeted mass spectrometry, and cytokine analysis will be presented.
Our preliminary experience suggests tolerability of locoregional delivery of quad-CAR T cells at doses currently evaluated. The trial remains ongoing and these data support continued evaluation of this product to better assess anti-tumor activity in patients with CNS tumors, including DIPG/DMG.
- cytokine
- inflammation
- central nervous system
- neurotoxicity syndromes
- central nervous system neoplasms
- fever
- flow cytometry
- headache
- heterogeneity
- antigens
- child
- chimera organism
- follow-up
- genes, erbb-2
- glioma
- pons
- epidermal growth factor receptors
- receptor, erbb-2
- receptors, antigen
- safety
- mass spectrometry
- t-lymphocytes
- arm
- neoplasms
- t-cell therapy
- nausea and vomiting
- childhood central nervous system neoplasms
- young adult
- surrogate endpoints
- adverse event
- infusion procedures
- tenofovir/ftc/elvitegravir/cobicistat combination pill
- cytokine release syndrome
- circulating tumor dna
- diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma
- immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome