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    Home > Active Ingredient News > Blood System > Whole genome sequencing reveals potentially complex genomic features in lymphoma patients who have failed CD19 CAR-T cell therapy

    Whole genome sequencing reveals potentially complex genomic features in lymphoma patients who have failed CD19 CAR-T cell therapy

    • Last Update: 2022-11-01
    • Source: Internet
    • Author: User
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    Targeting CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR-19) is a novel treatment option
    for patients with relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (R/R DLLBCL) and other aggressive lymphomas.
    Between 52% and 82% of patients respond immediately after CAR-19 infusion, but only about 40% achieve complete tumor eradication and long-term remission, and the underlying mechanism of treatment failure remains unknown
    .
    Several research groups have initially explored the impact of the lymphoma genome on the prognosis of CAR-19, and the results suggest that TP53 and other identified mutations in the lymphoma driver gene may play a role
    in this.
    Researchers at the University of South Florida Morsani School of Medicine dissected the role of
    genomic drivers in response to CAR-19 treatment.


    01Research methods

    The characteristics of patients with R/R large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL) are shown in Table 1
    .
    A persistent responder (no progression) is defined as a patient
    with a minimum follow-up of 6 months after CAR-19 infusion.
    A non-persistent responder (progression) is defined as a refractory case of CAR-19 or a
    relapse of lymphoma after the initial response.
    Collect the patient's peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) or tumor biopsy tissue to extract nucleic acids
    .
    Whole genome sequencing (WGS) analysis was performed
    on 51 samples from 49 patients with LBCL treated with CAR-19.


    Table 1


    02Clinical features of the study results

    A total of 49 LBCL patients were included in this review: 40 were new-onset DLBCL, 8 were converted follicular lymphoma (FL), and 1 was transformed chronic lymphoblastic leukemia (CLL).

    The median age of patients was 65 years (range: 44-79), 11 women (22.
    4%), and the median number of previous lines of treatment was 2 (range: 1-6).

    Forty patients (81.
    6%) were treated
    with a platinum-containing regimen.
    Eleven patients (22.
    4%) received high-dose melphalan-based conditioning and salvage therapy
    with autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
    Thirty-four patients (69.
    4%) received bridging therapy
    prior to apheresis and CAR-19 infusion.
    After CAR-19 treatment, 4 patients (8.
    2%) developed grade 3 or above cytokine release syndrome (CRS), and 15 patients (30.
    6%) developed grade 3 or above immune effector cell-associated neurotoxic syndrome (ICANS).

    One patient died of CAR-19 toxicity within one week of infusion, and the disease response was unknown
    .
    The median overall survival (OS) for all patients was 11.
    6 months and progression-free survival (PFS) was 8 months
    .
    The median follow-up of persistent responders was 17.
    3 months
    .
    Eighteen patients (36.
    7%) showed progression-free remission (Table 1).


    This study explored the clinical features associated with poor prognosis after CAR-19 treatment and found that tumor metabolic volume (MTV), sex, age, and number of previous treatment lines before treatment were associated with a higher risk of recurrence (P=0.
    048; P=0.
    029; P=0.
    008; P=0.
    016) (Figure 1).

    In patients with new-onset DLBCL, age and number of prior treatment lines were associated with a higher risk of recurrence (P=0.
    004, P=0.
    02).

    In addition, MTV (P=0.
    048) and bridging therapy (P=0.
    012) were significantly associated
    with shorter OS.


    Figure 1



    Driver mutation genes associated with the prognosis of CAR-19

    The study found no difference
    in total mutation load between progressors and persistent responders.
    TP53 is the most common driver mutation gene, with 42% of patients with R/R LBCL containing at least one mutation
    .
    But TP53 and any other individual driver mutant gene could not predict adverse outcomes
    after CAR-19 treatment.


    Previous studies have suggested that CD19 loss is one of the mechanisms of
    CAR-19 resistance.
    In this study, the genome-level study found that 3 patients had CD19 monoallele copy number loss, 2 patients showed CD19 mutations, and 4 of these 5 patients achieved a durable CAR-19 response
    .
    In addition, flow cytometry measured the expression of CD19 before treatment in 38 patients, of which 8 (10.
    5%) had missing or decreased CD19 protein expression, and 6 of these 8 patients had disease progression, but the difference between CD19 protein expression level and poor prognosis was not statistically significant (P=0.
    46), and there was no effect on OS (P=0.
    61).

    Finally, transcriptome studies of CD19 expression levels in 16 patients by RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) did not find any effect
    on PFS or OS.



    Mutational features associated with the prognosis of CAR-19

    In this study, researchers identified 12 gene mutation signatures involved in R/R lymphoma patients (Figure 2), of which 8 have been included in COSMIC v.
    2 and have been reported in newly diagnosed DLBCL patients, including: SBS1, SBS2, SBS5, SBS8, SBS9, SBS13, SBS17b, and SBS18
    。 The other 4 were due to exposure to different chemotherapy (SBS-MM1: melphalone; E_SBS37: oxaliplatin; SBS31: cisplatin/carboplatin; SBS35: cisplatin), 2 of which are not yet included in
    COSMIC.
    Studies have shown that when aggressive lymphoma recurs, the mutagen-related burden increases and the clonal dominance of individual surviving cells can also drive its progression
    .


    Figure 2


    Different mutation characteristics and patient response to CAR-19 were studied
    .
    The results showed a significantly shorter PFS in patients with APOBEC mutant activity (SBS2 and SBS13), and disease progression occurred in 12 of 13 patients (92%) (all patients: P=0.
    0023; new-onset DLBCL: P=0.
    045) (Figure 3).

    Other mutational signature tests found that SBS18 was associated with disease progression after CAR-19 treatment (9/11 [81%]) (all patients: P=0.
    0396; new-onset DLBCL: P=0.
    045) (Figure 3).

    SBS signaling reflects damage to the genome by oxygen radical stress
    .
    Both APOBEC and SBS18 are associated
    with OS shortening.


    Figure 3



    3p21.
    31 (RHOA) deletion is associated with poor response to CAR-19 treatment

    TP53 single allele or double allele deletion is common (59.
    2%), but it does not affect the survival of
    patients after CAR-19.
    3p21.
    31 (RHOA) deletion was the only strong predictor of poor prognosis after CAR-19 (all patients: P=0.
    0.
    0013; new-onset DLBCL: P<0.
    0001) (Figure 4).
    <b11> After CAR-19 infusion, progression
    occurred in 10 of 11 patients (91%).
    RHOA deletion was also associated with OS shortening (P=0.
    023).


    Figure 4



    Structural variation (SV) and poor response to CAR-19 treatment

    WGS identifies detailed SV and complex variations
    .
    4011 SVs were found in 51 WGS samples (median R/R sample: 60; Range: 9-277).

    In this study, 5 major complex SVs that could affect patient survival were observed, including: bimicrosomes (6 cases), chromosome fragmentation (23 cases), chromosome weaving (18 cases), and template insertion (11 cases).

    Chromosomal fragmentation was associated with shorter PFS after CAR-19 treatment (P = 0.
    026), with early progression in 18 of 22 patients (81.
    8%), but not related to OS
    .
    All patients with new-onset DLBCL with bimicrobodies (4/4) had rapid disease progression and all patients died after CAR-19 treatment (PFS: P=0.
    017 [Figure 5]; OS:P=0.
    0011)


    Figure 5


    In addition, the results suggest that established prognostic markers in newly diagnosed DLBCL have a lower
    ability to predict efficacy for CAR-19 treatment.
    In patients treated with CAR-19, different SBS characteristics, copy number variation (CNV), and complex SV were independent predictors of
    PFS and OS.


    03Research conclusion

    This study shows that among the complex interacting factors of CAR-19's efficacy and drug resistance against LBCL, tumor-inherent genomic alterations are key
    .
    The findings of this study could advance gene function studies to mechanically determine how the complex lymphoma genome creates an
    environment that is unfavorable to CAR-T cells and other emerging immunotherapies.


    References:

    Michael D.
    Jain, Bachisio Ziccheddu, Caroline A.
    Coughlin, et al.
    Whole-genome sequencing reveals complex genomic features underlying anti-CD19 CAR T-cell treatment failures in lymphoma.
    Blood.
    2022 Aug 4; 140(5): 491-503.
    doi: 10.
    1182/blood.
    2021015008.


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