Issue: July 2023
Fact checked byShenaz Bagha

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May 15, 2023
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B-cell system reset in CAR T-cell therapy ‘feasible,’ leads to durable remission in lupus

Issue: July 2023
Fact checked byShenaz Bagha
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In patients with systemic lupus erythematous, CAR T-cell therapy appears to be a feasible and effective method of achieving durable remission, according to a speaker at the Biologic Therapies Summit.

“Lupus patients often need quite substantial amounts of glucocorticoids to stay in remission, and that is a huge problem,” Georg Schett, MD, of Friedrich-Alexander University, in Germany, told attendees at the hybrid meeting. “These are usually young patients and glucocorticoid use, in the long run, has substantial side effects.”

CAR T-cell therapy, 3d rendering
“Patient one is now more than 2 years in remission with no treatment,” Georg Schett, MD, told attendees.
Image: Adobe Stock

CAR T-cell therapy has recently shown promise in the lupus space, demonstrating benefits in patients who might not have seen impactful results from other therapies intended to push lupus into remission, Schett said.

Georg Schett

The first patient to receive CAR T-cell therapy for lupus was a 20-year-old female patient who had already been treated with hydroxychloroquine, mycophenolate, tacrolimus (Prograf, Astellas Pharma), cyclophosphamide, belimumab (Benlysta, GlaxoSmithKline) and rituximab (Rituxan, Genentech), Schett said.

“It has been extremely disappointing, that rituximab, in randomized controlled studies, failed in lupus,” Schett said. “Rituximab is probably the only drug in the world that is not approved for lupus, and has negative studies, and is still used in lupus.”

Once the CAR T cells were cultivated, about 50 million were taken for use in therapy, while the rest of the cultivated cells were frozen, Schett said. The therapy cells are then infused into the patient over a short, 10-minute infusion.

“We were not sure whether the expansion of T cells from an autoimmune patient, also containing autoimmune T cells, would create a massive reaction in the patient,” Schett said. “These CAR T cells massively expanded from 0.3% being CAR T cells, to one-third of all T cells in the patient being CAR T cells after day 9.”

Following day 16, there was a “massive” reduction in the quantity of CAR T cells, Schett said. However, in following months, CAR T cells remained measurable circulating in the patient.

“They did their job,” Schett said. “And their job was to kill the B cells.”

Sometime between 50 and 150 days, Schett said, the B cells returned. However, the result was not a full return of disease, as is the case in lymphoma, but a “reboot” of the B-cell systems.

“What we did was reboot these B cells into a so-called ‘baby B-cell system,’” Schett said.

The result of the reset, he explained, is sustained remission through 18 months in some of the patients included in the early testing.

“Patient one is now more than 2 years in remission with no treatment,” Schett said.

Regarding tolerability and safety signals, Schett recalled that oncology patients receiving CAR T-cell therapy experienced cytokine surges.

“This happened at a very, very low level,” Schett said. “A key lesson here is that this is feasible.”