Patients treated with chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy are subject to profound immune suppression. Dynamics of immune reconstitution (IR) and impacts of IR on outcomes following infusion across CAR-T products are not well understood. Here, we profiled IR in 263 patients with relapsed/refractory large B-cell lymphoma receiving CAR-T therapy (axicabtagene ciloleucel 44.9%, lisocabtagene maraleucel 30.4%, tisagenlecleucel 24.7%). Following infusion, patients remain persistently immunosuppressed, with 48.1% having CD4+ T cell counts <200/µL and median CD3-19+ B cell counts remaining zero through 1 year after CAR-T. IR differences exist by product, with fastest CD4+ T cell recovery seen for tisagenlecleucel, driven primarily by more rapid recovery of the CD4+CCR7-45RA- effector memory subset. Natural killer cell, but not CD4+ T cell, recovery is significantly associated with favorable progression-free (HR: 0.647; 95% CI: 0.476-0.880) and overall survival (HR: 0.637; 95% CI: 0.441-0.920) and inversely correlated with inflammatory markers measured at time of infusion.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/2643-3230.BCD-24-0163 | DOI Listing |
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