Cancer Regression and Neurological Toxicity Following Anti-MAGE-A3 TCR Gene Therapy : Journal of Immunotherapy

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Clinical Studies

Cancer Regression and Neurological Toxicity Following Anti-MAGE-A3 TCR Gene Therapy

Morgan, Richard A.*; Chinnasamy, Nachimuthu*; Abate-Daga, Daniel*; Gros, Alena*; Robbins, Paul F.*; Zheng, Zhili*; Dudley, Mark E.*; Feldman, Steven A.*; Yang, James C.*; Sherry, Richard M.*; Phan, Giao Q.*; Hughes, Marybeth S.*; Kammula, Udai S.*; Miller, Akemi D.*; Hessman, Crystal J.*; Stewart, Ashley A.*; Restifo, Nicholas P.*; Quezado, Martha M.; Alimchandani, Meghna; Rosenberg, Avi Z.; Nath, Avindra; Wang, Tongguang; Bielekova, Bibiana; Wuest, Simone C.; Akula, Nirmala§; McMahon, Francis J.§; Wilde, Susanne; Mosetter, Barbara; Schendel, Dolores J.∥,¶; Laurencot, Carolyn M.*; Rosenberg, Steven A.*

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Journal of Immunotherapy 36(2):p 133-151, February–March 2013. | DOI: 10.1097/CJI.0b013e3182829903

Abstract

Nine cancer patients were treated with adoptive cell therapy using autologous anti-MAGE-A3 T-cell receptors (TCR)-engineered T cells. Five patients experienced clinical regression of their cancers including 2 on-going responders. Beginning 1–2 days postinfusion, 3 patients (#’s 5, 7, and 8) experienced mental status changes, and 2 patients (5 and 8) lapsed into comas and subsequently died. Magnetic resonance imagining analysis of patients 5 and 8 demonstrated periventricular leukomalacia, and examination of their brains at autopsy revealed necrotizing leukoencephalopathy with extensive white matter defects associated with infiltration of CD3+/CD8+ T cells. Patient 7, developed Parkinson-like symptoms, which resolved over 4 weeks and fully recovered. Immunohistochemical staining of patient and normal brain samples demonstrated rare positively staining neurons with an antibody that recognizes multiple MAGE-A family members. The TCR used in this study recognized epitopes in MAGE-A3/A9/A12. Molecular assays of human brain samples using real-time quantitative-polymerase chain reaction, Nanostring quantitation, and deep-sequencing indicated that MAGE-A12 was expressed in human brain (and possibly MAGE-A1, MAGE-A8, and MAGE-A9). This previously unrecognized expression of MAGE-A12 in human brain was possibly the initiating event of a TCR-mediated inflammatory response that resulted in neuronal cell destruction and raises caution for clinical applications targeting MAGE-A family members with highly active immunotherapies.

© 2013 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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