AI Article Synopsis

  • Chemotherapy is the main treatment for B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), but not all patients respond, especially those with refractory/relapse (R/R) disease or minimal residual disease (MRD) that comes back; CAR-T therapy offers a new option for these cases.
  • A clinical trial involving 115 patients aged 1-25 showed that 96.5% achieved complete remission within a month after CAR-T-19 infusion, with a median follow-up revealing 4-year survival rates of around 68.7% for leukemia-free survival and 70.7% overall.
  • The study concluded that CD19 CAR-T therapy is effective and safe for both R/R B-ALL and patients

Article Abstract

Purpose: Chemotherapy has been the primary treatment for patients with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). However, there are still patients who are not sensitive to chemotherapy, including those with refractory/relapse (R/R) disease and those experiencing minimal residual disease (MRD) re-emergence. Chimeric antigen receptor-T lymphocytes (CAR-T) therapy may provide a new treatment option for these patients.

Materials And Methods: Our institution conducted a single-arm prospective clinical trial (ChiCTR-OPN-17013507) using CAR-T-19 to treat R/R B-ALL and MRD re-emergent patients. One hundred and fifteen patients, aged 1-25 years (median age, 8 years), were enrolled, including 67 R/R and 48 MRD re-emergent CD19-positive B-ALL patients.

Results: All patients achieved morphologic complete remission (CR), and within 1 month after infusion, 111 out of 115 (96.5%) patients achieved MRD-negative CR. With a median follow-up time of 48.4 months, the estimated 4-year leukemia-free survival (LFS) rate and overall survival (OS) rate were 68.7%±4.5% and 70.7%±4.3%, respectively. There were no significant differences in long-term efficacy observed among patients with different disease statuses before infusion (4-year OS: MRD re-emergence vs. R/R B-ALL, 70.6%±6.6% vs. 66.5%±6.1%, p=0.755; 4-year LFS: MRD re-emergence vs. R/R B-ALL, 67.3%±7.0% vs. 63.8%±6.2%, p=0.704). R/R B-ALL patients bridging to transplantation after CAR-T treatment had a superior OS and LFS compared to those who did not. However, for MRD re-emergent patients, there was no significant difference in OS and LFS, regardless of whether they underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplantation or not.

Conclusion: CD19 CAR-T therapy effectively and safely cures both R/R B-ALL and MRD re-emergent patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11261203PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4143/crt.2023.1205DOI Listing

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