Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate treatment response, survival, safety profiles, and predictive factors to chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) therapy in Chinese patients with relapsed or refractory B cell acute lymphoblast leukemia (R/R B-ALL). 39R/R B-ALL patients who underwent CAR-T therapy were included. Baseline data were collected from patients’ electronic medical records. Patients’ peripheral bloods, bone marrow aspirates, and biopsies were obtained for routine examination, and treatment response and survival profiles as well as adverse events were evaluated. The rates of complete remission (CR), CR with minimal residual disease (MRD) negative/positive, and bridging to hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) were 92.3%, 76.9%, 15.4%, and 43.6%, respectively. The median event-free survival (EFS) was 11.6 months (95% confidence interval (CI): 4.0–19.2 months) and median overall survival (OS) was 14.0 months (95% CI: 10.9–17.1 months). Bridging to HSCT independently predicted better EFS and OS, while high bone marrow blasts level independently predicted worse EFS. The incidence of cytokine release syndrome (CRS) was 97.4%, and refractory disease as well as decreased white blood cell independently predicted higher risk of severe CRS. Other common adverse events included hematologic toxicities (grade I: 5.1%, grade II: 7.7%, grade III: 17.9%, grade IV: 69.2%), neurotoxicity (28.2%), infection (38.5%), and admission for intensive care unit (10.3%). In conclusion, CAR-T therapy presents with promising treatment response, survival and safety profiles, and higher disease burden predicts worse survival as well as increased risk of severe CRS in Chinese R/R B-ALL patients.

Details

Title
Treatment response, survival, safety, and predictive factors to chimeric antigen receptor T cell therapy in Chinese relapsed or refractory B cell acute lymphoblast leukemia patients
Author
Li, Limin 1 ; Liu, Jie 1 ; Xu Mengyuan 1 ; Yu, Hongjuan 1 ; Lv Chengfang 1 ; Cao Fenglin 1 ; Wang, Zhenkun 1 ; Fu Yueyue 1 ; Zhang Mingwen 1 ; Meng Hongbin 1 ; Zhang, Xiaoqian 1 ; Kang, Liqing 2 ; Zhang, Zhuo 1 ; Li, Jinmei 1 ; Feng Jiawei 1 ; Lian Xin 1 ; Yu, Lei 2 ; Zhou, Jin 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo 

 The Institute of The Hematology and Oncology of Heilongjiang Province, Department of HematologyThe First Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University, Harbin, China 
 Shanghai Unicar-Therapy Bio-medicine Technology Co., Ltd, Shanghai, China 
Publication year
2020
Publication date
Mar 2020
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
e-ISSN
20414889
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2384220960
Copyright
This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.