AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study tested the safety and efficacy of EBV-specific CTLs in treating refractory or recurrent angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL) in nine patients, all at advanced stages (III and IV) with previous chemotherapy treatments.
  • - Out of the patients treated, 66.7% showed some response to the therapy, with a 55.6% objective remission rate; notable outcomes included complete remission in two patients with disease progression.
  • - Despite some side effects like fever and rash, no severe complications occurred; however, the study indicated a 3-year overall survival rate of 44.4% and a provisional progression-free survival of 33.3%.

Article Abstract

The efficacy and safety of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-specific antigen peptide-activated cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) in the treatment of refractory or recurrent angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL) was determined in this prospective one-arm clinical study. Seven males and two females were enrolled with a median age of 70 years. The tumor stages were all stage III and IV. All patients had group B symptoms and IPI scores of 3 to 5 points. All patients received chemotherapy before CTLs infusion which the median chemotherapy cycle was three. The diseases states before CTLs included five cases of disease progression (PD), two cases of recurrence (R), and two cases with residual lesions after chemotherapy. Eight patients received HLA-haploidentical EBV-specific CTLs, and one patient chose autologous CTLs. The number of transfused cells was 1.67 to 2.38 × 10 for one course of CTLs therapy. One patient was treated with three courses of CTLs, three patients were treated with two courses of CTLs, and five patients were treated with one course of CTLs. During the infusion, eight patients had fever, one patient had rash, and no graft-vs-host diseases were observed. The EBV-DNA decreased by more than two orders of magnitude in six patients, and the response rate was 66.7%. Two patients of PD status achieved complete remission (CR), one patient of PD status achieved partial remission, two patients with residual lesions after chemotherapy achieved CR, and four patients had no response. The objective remission rate was 55.6%. After the median follow-up of 14.5 months, five patients died, and three patients were completely relieved while one patient was lost during follow-up. The 3-year overall survival was 44.4% and 3-year progression-free survival was 33.3%. EBV-specific antigen peptide-activated CTLs showed positive effect in certain patients with refractory and recurrent AITL with high clinical safety.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hon.2726DOI Listing

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