Transcriptional signatures associated with persisting CD19 CAR-T cells in children with leukemia

ND Anderson, J Birch, T Accogli, I Criado… - Nature Medicine, 2023 - nature.com
ND Anderson, J Birch, T Accogli, I Criado, E Khabirova, C Parks, Y Wood, MD Young
Nature Medicine, 2023nature.com
In the context of relapsed and refractory childhood pre-B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia
(R/R B-ALL), CD19-targeting chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells often induce durable
remissions, which requires the persistence of CAR-T cells. In this study, we systematically
analyzed CD19 CAR-T cells of 10 children with R/R B-ALL enrolled in the CARPALL trial via
high-throughput single-cell gene expression and T cell receptor sequencing of infusion
products and serial blood and bone marrow samples up to 5 years after infusion. We show …
Abstract
In the context of relapsed and refractory childhood pre-B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (R/R B-ALL), CD19-targeting chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells often induce durable remissions, which requires the persistence of CAR-T cells. In this study, we systematically analyzed CD19 CAR-T cells of 10 children with R/R B-ALL enrolled in the CARPALL trial via high-throughput single-cell gene expression and T cell receptor sequencing of infusion products and serial blood and bone marrow samples up to 5 years after infusion. We show that long-lived CAR-T cells developed a CD4/CD8 double-negative phenotype with an exhausted-like memory state and distinct transcriptional signature. This persistence signature was dominant among circulating CAR-T cells in all children with a long-lived treatment response for which sequencing data were sufficient (4/4, 100%). The signature was also present across T cell subsets and clonotypes, indicating that persisting CAR-T cells converge transcriptionally. This persistence signature was also detected in two adult patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia with decade-long remissions who received a different CD19 CAR-T cell product. Examination of single T cell transcriptomes from a wide range of healthy and diseased tissues across children and adults indicated that the persistence signature may be specific to long-lived CAR-T cells. These findings raise the possibility that a universal transcriptional signature of clinically effective, persistent CD19 CAR-T cells exists.
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