AI Article Synopsis

  • This clinical trial tested the safety and effectiveness of activated and expanded natural killer (NKAE) cells combined with anti-myeloma drugs in five patients with relapsed multiple myeloma.
  • The NKAE cells were generated and expanded over three weeks, and patients received multiple infusions, leading to significant NK cell production and activity.
  • Results showed that four of the five patients achieved disease stabilization, with two experiencing substantial reductions in bone marrow infiltration and lasting treatment responses, indicating that multiple NKAE infusions are safe and show promise for relapsed/refractory myeloma.

Article Abstract

This proof-of-concept single-arm open-label phase I clinical trial (NCT02481934) studied the safety and efficacy of multiple infusions of activated and expanded natural killer (NKAE) cells in combination with anti-myeloma drugs in multiple myeloma patients. It included five patients with relapsed or refractory MM who had received two to seven prior lines of therapy; NK cells were expanded for 3 weeks with K562-mb15-41BBL cells. Patients received four cycles of pharmacological treatment with two infusions of 7.5 × 10 NKAEs/kg per cycle. NKAE generation, expansion, and NK monitoring was assessed using flow cytometry. Eighteen clinical-grade NKAE cell GMP-grade products were generated to obtain 627 × 10 NKAEs (range: 315-919 × 10) for the first infusion and 943 × 10 (range: 471-1481 × 10) for the second infusion with 90% (±7%) purity. Neutropenia grade II occurred in two patients and was related to chemotherapy. Of the five patients, four showed disease stabilization before the end of NKAE treatment, and two showed a 50% reduction in bone marrow infiltration and a long-term (>1 y) response. The NKAE cells had a highly cytotoxic phenotype and high cytotoxicity . Infused NKAE cells were detected in bone marrow and peripheral blood after infusions. expansion of autologous NK cells is feasible, NKAE cells are clinically active and the multiple infusions are well tolerated in patients with relapsed or refractory myeloma.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5213771PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2016.1250051DOI Listing

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