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September 17, 2020
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Neurotoxicity after CAR T-cell therapy has no effect on survival in lymphoma subset

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Development of immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome did not negatively affect survival outcomes among patients treated with axicabtagene ciloleucel for relapsed or refractory large B-cell lymphoma, study results showed.

About half of patients in the single-center study, published in Neuro-Oncology, experienced immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS) after treatment with axicabtagene ciloleucel (Yescarta; Kite Pharma/Gilead), a CD19-targeted chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy also known as axi-cel. Nearly three-quarters of ICANS cases were grade 3 or grade 4.

Saurabh Dahiya, MD, FACP, assistant professor of medicine and director of cellular therapy in leukemia/lymphoma at University of Maryland Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Comprehensive Cancer Center.

The analysis also showed that baseline fibrinogen levels may serve as a predictive biomarker for ICANS.

“We wanted to see how our experience with neurotoxicity compared with others,” Saurabh Dahiya, MD, FACP, assistant professor of medicine and director of cellular therapy in leukemia/lymphoma at University of Maryland Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Comprehensive Cancer Center, told Healio.

What they found was at odds with a report published last year in Blood that showed neurotoxicity had an adverse effect on OS among patients who received CAR T-cell therapy for lymphoma.

“Our clinical experience had not shown there to be a difference in survival between those who had neurotoxicity and those who didn’t,” Dahiya said. “Having ICANS doesn’t portend poorer survival based on our data.”

Study findings

Dahiya and colleagues identified 45 adults (median age, 60 years; range, 26-75; 51% women) who received axi-cel for treatment of relapsed or refractory large B-cell lymphoma at Greenebaum Comprehensive Cancer Center between April 2018 and May 2019.

Laboratory values collected for biomarker analysis included C-reactive protein, ferritin, fibrinogen and lactate dehydrogenase levels.

Researchers routinely monitored patients for evidence of ICANS using the CARTOX Working Group’s CARTOX-10 scoring criteria and graded the severity of ICANS using Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 4.03 criteria.

Results showed 25 patients (56%) experienced ICANS after CAR T-cell infusion. Eighteen (72%) of those who developed neurotoxicity had either grade 3 or grade 4 ICANS, with a median time to development of ICANS of 5 days (range, 3-11).

Most patients (92%) with ICANS required steroids to resolve their symptoms.

ICANS of any grade did not affect complete response to therapy, PFS or OS.

Biomarker analysis showed associations of ICANS with elevated preinfusion levels of fibrinogen (517 mg/dL vs. 403 mg/dL; ULN 438 mg/dL; P = .01) and lactate dehydrogenase (618 U/L vs. 506 U/L; ULN 618 U/L; P = .04).

The retrospective, single-center design of the study served as a limitation, according to the researchers. Because the results are also limited to patients who underwent CAR T-cell therapy for large B-cell lymphoma, they should not be applied to other indications, Dahiya said.

“Each disease has specific factors that influence response and survival rates,” he told Healio. “It’s not likely that this could be generalized to other CAR-Ts or indications. However, the finding that higher fibrinogen levels increase the chances of ICANS might be more generally applied to other CAR-Ts for other indications because it is reflective of an increased inflammatory state.”

Clinical significance

The laboratory measurements the researchers considered collecting were among those that are easily or routinely collected and available in clinical practice, Dahiya said. A coagulation panel would be routine at nearly all CAR T-cell therapy centers, and knowing it could influence the development of ICANS would be clinically useful when monitoring patients after therapy.

“For example, you may want to consider performing routine neurotoxicity assessments more often in patients who had high fibrinogen levels,” he said.

Dahiya said his group plans to study this relationship further via validation studies to confirm the association.

He described the response rates and survival outcomes as “very reassuring.”

“Oftentimes, our patients are highly educated on the latest developments with the therapy and results like ours help to further inform them — if they experienced these toxicities — of what it may mean for their overall outcomes,” he told Healio. “With these data, we can say to our patients that adverse effects like [cytokine release syndrome] and ICANS may not necessarily have a negative effect on their outcomes.”

Reference:

For more information:

Saurabh Dahiya, MD, FACP, can be reached at sdahiya@umm.edu.