Off-The-Shelf Immunotherapy Product Induces Positive Response in Patients with NHL

News
Article

Mosunetuzumab generated durable responses in patients with highly refractory non-Hodgkin lymphomas.

A novel bispecific antibody yielded an objective response rate (ORR) of 37.1%, including a 22.2% complete remission (CR) rate in patients with highly refractory non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHLs) who had previously received chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy, according to study results presented at the 2019 American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting.1

Moreover, investigators also observed an expansion of lymphocytes, including residual CAR T cells in 2 of 8 patients, and CRs with and without CAR T-cell expansions.

Mosunetuzumab is a humanized antibody that contains 2 antigen-recognition sites: CD3, a T-cell surface antigen, and CD20, a tumor-associated antigen exclusively expressed on B cells.2 “In binding to the T cells, it’s capable of inducing T-cell activation and, when engaged with a B cell, it will cause a death of the target cell and eliminate those cells,” Schuster said at a press briefing.

“Unlike CAR T-cell therapy, mosunetuzumab is an off-the-shelf immunotherapy product that can be given to patients without having to genetically modify their T cells,” Schuster, director of the lymphoma program at Abramson Cancer Center at the University of Pennsylvania (UPenn) in Philadelphia, said in a statement.

The agent represents a promising therapy for patients whose disease has recurred after receiving CAR therapy or is progressing too rapidly to be treated with personalized gene therapy, said lead investigator Stephen J. Schuster, MD.

In addition, the therapy exhibited a tolerable safety profile, with mostly low-grade occurrences of cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and neurological adverse events (AEs), said Schuster, who is also the Robert and Margarita Louis-Dreyfus Professor in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia and Lymphoma Clinical Care and Research at UPenn.

At the briefing, Schuster reported efficacy results for 191 evaluable patients treated with mosunetuzumab monotherapy during the ongoing phase I/Ib dose-escalation GO29781 study (NCT02500407) in late-line relapsed/refractory B-cell NHLs. The data are from Group B of the study, in which patients received mosunetuzumab intravenously with stepped-up dosing on days 1, 8, and 15 of cycle 1, and then as a fixed dose on day 1 of each subsequent 21-day cycle (maximum 17 cycles).

Among 124 patients with aggressive NHL, the objective response rate (ORR) was 37.1% (n = 46), including 19.4% (n = 24) with a CR, according to pooled data from participants who received mosunetuzumab at doses ranging from 2.8 mg to 40.5 mg. After a median follow-up of 6 months, 17 patients remain in CR.

In 67 participants with indolent NHL, the ORR was 62.7% (n = 42), including 43.3% (n = 29) with a CR, for dosing cohorts ranging from 2.8 mg to 13.5 mg. Twenty-four patients remain in CR up to 26 months after initial treatment.

Notably, patients who previously received CAR T-cell therapy also responded to mosunetuzumab. Among 18 evaluable patients in this cohort, the ORR was 38.9% (n = 7), including a 22.2% CR rate (n = 4). Investigators also observed an expansion of lymphocytes, including residual CAR T cells in 2 of 8 patients, and CRs with and without CAR T-cell expansions.

Schuster described a 58-year-old woman with relapsed/refractory follicular lymphoma (FL) who had 8 prior lines of systemic treatment that included CD19-directed CAR T-cell therapy. The patient achieved a CR after 3 cycles of mosunetuzumab therapy and remains in CR after more than 8 months.

“This not an ongoing therapy forever,” Schuster said. “This is a therapy that patients receive until they’re in remission and then it’s discontinued. Three-quarters of the remission patients are off therapy.”

In the population evaluable for safety, the study has enrolled 270 patients; the median age is 62.0 years (range, 19-96), and 61.2% had a baseline ECOG performance score of 1. The safety population comprises 66.7% with aggressive NHLs, including diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), transformed FL, mantle cell lymphoma, and 31.5% with FL and other indolent NHL types. The median number of prior system therapies was 3 (range, 1-14). In terms of prior therapies, 28.5% had received autologous stem cell transplantation and 71.9% were refractory to their last prior therapy.

Of 30 patients who had received prior CAR T-cell therapy, 22 (73.3%) were refractory to that therapy. This group had received a median 5 lines of prior systemic therapies (range, 3-14).

In the safety analysis, the incidence of all grades of CRS was 28.9% among all participants (N = 270) and 26.7% among those who previously received CAR therapy (n = 30). The majority of these events were of grade 1 or 2 severity, occurred mostly in cycle 1 of therapy, and had a median duration of 2 days (range, 1-59). There were 3 grade 3 CRS occurrences in the total population (1.1%) and 1 in the prior CAR cohort (3.3%). A total of 8 patients received tocilizumab (Actemra) as supportive care and most CRS events (96.6%) were resolved by the clinical cutoff date.

In all, neurological AEs were observed in 43.7% of patients in the total population and 43.3% in the CAR cohort. The most common neurological AEs included headache (15.6%), insomnia (9.3%), and dizziness (9.3%) and were of grades 1 and 2 severity. The incidence of grade 3 neurological AEs was 3.7% in the broad population and 10.0% in the CAR group.

“The safety with regard to cytokine release syndrome and neurological adverse events are almost identical whether the patients have had prior CAR T-cell therapy or not,” Schuster said. “What’s interesting is [that] these 2 adverse events are much more frequent during CAR T-cell therapy.”

The 2 FDA-approved CAR therapies, tisagenlecleucel (Kymriah) and axicabtagene ciloleucel (Yescarta), are CD19-directed genetically modified autologous T-cell immunotherapies. Although CAR agents represent a significant advance in treating refractory B-cell malignancies, Schuster said, two-thirds of patients with lymphomas do not respond.

He also said the process of producing and obtaining insurance approval for CAR therapy delays treatment by several weeks. “A month or 2 months doesn’t sound long but it’s an eternity when you have a patient with a very fast-paced disease,” he said.

“To be able to use the cellular immunotherapeutic approach [with mosunetuzumab] rapidly in patients who need this approach because traditional immunochemotherapy is no longer working is, I think, a very important aspect,” Schuster added. An off-the-shelf product that has alternative B-cell targets to CD19, which the approved CAR T cell products address, is necessary.”

References:

1. Schuster SJ, Bartlett NL, Assouline S, et al. Mosunetuzumab induces complete remissions in poor prognosis non-Hodgkin lymphoma patients, including those who are resistant to or relapsing after chimeric antigen receptor T-Cell (CAR-T) therapies, and is active in treatment through multiple lines. Presented at: American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting; December 7-10, 2019; Orlando, FL. Abstract 6. ash.confex.com/ash/2019/webprogram/Paper123742.html.

2. Mosunetuzumab. NCI Drug Dictionary. cancer.gov/publications/dictionaries/cancer-drug/def/774847. Accessed December 7, 2019.

This article originally appeared on OncLive, titled “Novel Antibody Elicits Complete Remissions in NHL After CAR Relapses.”

Recent Videos
Harmonizing protocols across the health care system may bolster the feasibility of giving bispecifics to those with lymphoma in a community setting.
Establishment of an AYA Lymphoma Consortium has facilitated a process to better understand and address gaps in knowledge for this patient group.
Adult and pediatric oncology collaboration in assessing nivolumab in advanced Hodgkin lymphoma facilitated the phase 3 SWOG S1826 findings.
Treatment paradigms differ between adult and pediatric oncologists when treating young adults with lymphoma.
No evidence indicates synergistic toxicity when combining radiation with CAR T-cell therapy in this population, according to Timothy Robinson, MD, PhD.
The addition of radiotherapy to CAR T-cell therapy may particularly benefit patients with localized disease, according to Timothy Robinson, MD, PhD.
Timothy Robinson, MD, PhD, discusses how radiation may play a role as bridging therapy to CAR T-cell therapy for patients with relapsed/refractory DLBCL.
A panel of 3 experts on CML
A panel of 3 experts on CML
A panel of 3 experts on CML
Related Content