biospectrumasiaSeptember 19, 2017
Tag: BPDCN , FDA , CAR-T cell therapy , AML
French biotech firm Cellectis has revealed that FDA has put a clinical hold on two of its clinical trials for its gene-edited allogeneic CAR-T therapy after a patient died. The hold applies to two Phase 1 studies of UCART123, one in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and the other in blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm (BPDCN).
Only one patient has been treated in each study.
The death occurred in the first patient treated in the BPDCN trial, a 78-year- old man treated with one prior therapy. He received 30mg/m2/day fludarabine for four days and 1g/m2/day cyclophosphamide for three days as a preconditioning regimen. On Aug. 16, he received 6.25x105 UCART123 cells per kilogram.
Five days later, the patient experienced grade two cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and a grade 3 lung infection. These were treated with tocilizumab and antibiotics.
Yet, three days after that, the patient experienced a grade 5 CRS with a grade 4 capillary leak syndrome. Despite treatment, he died the next day.
The first patient treated in the AML study received the same dosing regimen as the patient treated in the BPDCN trial and experienced similar complications, including a grade 2 CRS eight days after treatment, that worsened to a grade 3 infection. She also experienced grade 4 capillary leak syndrome. Her complications were resolved with treatment, reportedBioPharmaDive.
CRS is a complication known to occur with anti-T cell antibody infusions. Cellectis said it is working with clinical trial investigators and the FDA to resume the trials with an amended trial protocol that includes a lower dose of UCART123.
Competitor Juno Therapeutics halted, and eventually discontinued, its lead program after multiple deaths in its CAR-T clinical trials.
Juno attributed the deaths to the interaction between the pre-conditioning chemo regimen —consisting of fludarabine and cyclophosphamide — and the CAR-T cells reinfused back into the patient.
Cellectis and Juno have fallen behind other CAR-T developers. Last week was a landmark time for the new technology: Novartis AG got the first FDA approval for CAR-T therapy, while the other CAR-T manufacturers haven’t been without safety concerns of their own.
Kite, who announced it will be acquired by Gilead Sciences, Inc. for $11.9 billion, also reported patient deaths in one of its trials.
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