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    For years, the cornerstones of cancer treatment have been    surgery,     chemotherapy, and     radiation therapy. Over the last decade, targeted therapies    like imatinib    (Gleevec) and trastuzumab    (Herceptin)drugs that target cancer cells by homing in on    specific molecular changes seen primarily in those cellshave    also emerged as standard treatments for a number of cancers.  
    Illustration of the components of second- and third-generation    chimeric antigen receptor T cells. (Adapted by permission from    the American Association for Cancer Research: Lee, DW et al.    The Future Is Now: Chimeric Antigen Receptors as New Targeted    Therapies for Childhood Cancer. Clin Cancer Res; 2012;18(10);    278090. doi:10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-11-1920)  
    And now, despite years of starts and stutter steps, excitement    is growing for     immunotherapytherapies that harness the power of a    patients immune system to combat their disease, or what some    in the research community are calling the fifth pillar of    cancer treatment.  
    One approach to immunotherapy involves engineering patients    own immune cells to recognize and attack their tumors. And    although this approach, called adoptive cell transfer (ACT),    has been restricted to small clinical trials so far, treatments    using these engineered immune cells have generated some    remarkable responses in patients with advanced cancer.  
    For example, in several early-stage trials testing ACT in    patients with advanced     acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) who had few if any    remaining treatment options, many patients cancers have    disappeared entirely. Several of these patients have remained    cancer free for extended periods.  
    Equally promising results have been reported in several small    trials involving patients with lymphoma.  
    These are small clinical trials, their lead investigators    cautioned, and much more research is needed.  
    But the results from the trials performed thus far are proof    of principle that we can successfully alter patients     T cells so that they attack their cancer cells, said one    of the trial's leaders, Renier J. Brentjens, M.D., Ph.D., of    Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) in New York.  
    Adoptive cell transfer is like giving patients a living drug,    continued Dr. Brentjens.  
    Thats because ACTs building blocks are T cells, a type of    immune cell collected from the patients own blood. After    collection, the T cells are genetically engineered to produce    special     receptors on their surface called     chimeric     antigen receptors (CARs). CARs are proteins that allow the    T cells to recognize a specific protein (antigen) on tumor    cells. These engineered CAR T cells are then grown in the    laboratory until they number in the billions.  
    The expanded population of CAR T cells is then infused into the    patient. After the infusion, if all goes as planned, the T    cells multiply in the patients body and, with guidance from    their engineered receptor, recognize and kill cancer cells that    harbor the antigen on their surfaces.  
      Although adoptive cell transfer has been restricted to small      clinical trials so far, treatments using these engineered      immune cells have generated some remarkable responses in      patients with advanced cancer.    
    This process builds on a     similar form of ACT pioneered by Steven Rosenberg, M.D.,    Ph.D., and his colleagues from NCIs Surgery    Branch for patients with advanced melanoma.  
    The CAR T cells are much more potent than anything we can    achieve with other immune-based treatments being studied, said    Crystal Mackall, M.D., of NCIs Pediatric Oncology Branch    (POB).  
    Even so, investigators working in this field caution that there    is still much to learn about CAR T-cell therapy. But the    early results from trials like these have generated    considerable optimism.  
    CAR T-cell therapy eventually may become a standard therapy    for some     B-cell malignancies like ALL and     chronic lymphocytic leukemia, Dr. Rosenberg wrote in a    Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology article.  
    More than 80 percent of children who are diagnosed with ALL    that arises in B cellsthe predominant type of pediatric    ALLwill be cured by intensive chemotherapy.  
    For patients whose cancers return after intensive chemotherapy    or a     stem cell transplant, the remaining treatment options are    close to none, said Stephan Grupp, M.D., Ph.D., of the    Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and the lead    investigator of a trial testing CAR T cells primarily in    children with ALL. This treatment may represent a much-needed    new option for such patients, he said.  
    Trials of CAR T cells in adults and children with leukemia and    lymphoma have used T cells engineered to target the CD19    antigen, which is present on the surface of nearly all B cells,    both normal and cancerous.  
    In the CHOP trial, which is being conducted in collaboration    with researchers from the University of Pennsylvania, all signs    of cancer disappeared (a complete response) in 27 of the 30    patients treated in the study, according to findings    published October 16 in the New England Journal of    Medicine.  
    Nineteen of the 27 patients with complete responses have    remained in remission, the study authors reported, with 15 of    these patients receiving no further therapy and 4 patients    withdrawing from the trial to receive other therapy.  
    According to the most recent     data from a POB trial that included children with ALL, 14    of 20 patients had a complete response. And of the 12 patients    who had no evidence of leukemic cells, called blasts, in their    bone marrow after CAR T-cell treatment, 10 have gone on to    receive a stem cell transplant and remain cancer free, reported    the studys lead investigator, Daniel W. Lee, M.D., also of the    POB.  
      Dr. Crystal      Mackall    
    Our findings strongly suggest that CAR T-cell therapy is a    useful bridge to bone marrow transplant for patients who are no    longer responding to chemotherapy, Dr. Lee said.  
    Similar results have been seen in phase I trials of adult    patients conducted at MSKCC and NCI.  
    In findings    published in February 2014, 14 of the 16 participants in the    MSKCC trial treated to that point had experienced complete    responses, which in some cases occurred 2 weeks or sooner after    treatment began. Of those patients who were eligible, 7    underwent a stem cell transplant and are still cancer free.  
    The NCI-led trial of CAR T cells included 15 adult patients,    the majority of whom had advanced     diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. Most patients in the trial    had either complete or partial responses, reported    James Kochenderfer, M.D., and his NCI colleagues.  
    Our data provide the first true glimpse of the potential of    this approach in patients with aggressive lymphomas that, until    this point, were virtually untreatable, Dr. Kochenderfer said.    [NCI Surgery Branch researchers have also reported promising    results    from one of the first trials testing CAR T cells derived from    donors, rather than the patients themselves, to treat leukemia    and lymphoma.]  
    Other findings from the trials have been encouraging, as well.    For example, the number of CAR T cells increased dramatically    after infusion into patients, as much as 1,000-fold in some    individuals. In addition, after infusion, CAR T cells were    detected in the central nervous system, a so-called sanctuary    site where solitary cancer cells that have evaded chemotherapy    or radiation may hide. In two patients in the NCI pediatric    trial, the CAR T-cell treatment eradicated cancer that had    spread to the central nervous system.  
    If CAR T cells can persist at these sites, it could help fend    off relapses, Dr. Mackall noted.  
    CAR T-cell therapy can cause several worrisome side effects,    perhaps the most troublesome being     cytokine-release syndrome.  
    The infused T cells release cytokines, which are chemical    messengers that help the T cells carry out their duties. With    cytokine-release syndrome, there is a rapid and massive release    of cytokines into the bloodstream, which can lead to    dangerously high fevers and precipitous drops in blood    pressure.  
    Cytokine-release syndrome is a common problem in patients    treated with CAR T cells. In the POB and CHOP trials, patients    with the most extensive disease prior to receiving the CAR T    cells were more likely to experience severe cases of    cytokine-release syndrome.  
    For most patients, trial investigators have reported, the side    effects are mild enough that they can be managed with standard    supportive therapies, including steroids.  
    The research team at CHOP noticed that patients experiencing    severe reactions all had particularly high levels of     IL-6, a cytokine that is secreted by T cells and     macrophages in response to inflammation. So they turned to    two drugs that are approved to treat inflammatory conditions    like juvenile arthritis: etanercept (Enbrel) and tocilizumab    (Actemra), the latter of which blocks IL-6 activity.  
    The patients had excellent responses to the treatment, Dr.    Grupp said. We believe that [these drugs] will be a major part    of toxicity management for these patients.  
    The other two teams subsequently used tocilizumab in several    patients. Dr. Brentjens agreed that both drugs could become a    useful way to help manage cytokine-release syndrome because,    unlike steroids, they dont appear to affect the infused CAR T    cells activity or proliferation.  
    Even with these encouraging preliminary findings, more research    is needed before CAR T-cell therapy becomes a routine option    for patients with ALL.  
    We need to treat more patients and have longer follow-up to    really say what the impact of this therapy is [and] to    understand its true performance characteristics, Dr. Grupp    said.  
      We need to treat more patients and have longer follow-up to      really say what the impact of this therapy is [and] to      understand its true performance characteristics.    
      Dr. Stephan Grupp    
    Several other trials testing CAR T cells in children and adults    are ongoing and, with greater interest and involvement from the    pharmaceutical and biotechnology sector, more trials testing    CAR T cells are being planned.  
    Researchers are also studying ways to improve on the positive    results obtained to date, including refining the process by    which the CAR T cells are produced.  
    Research groups like Dr. Brentjens are also working to make a    superior CAR T cell, including developing a better receptor and    identifying better targets.  
    For example, Dr. Lee and his colleagues at NCI have    developed CAR T cells that target the CD22 antigen, which    is also present on most B cells, although in smaller quantities    than CD19. The CD22-targeted T cells, he believes, could be    used in concert with CD19-targeted T cells as a one-two punch    in ALL and other B-cell cancers. NCI researchers hope to begin    the first clinical trial testing the CD22-targeted CAR T cells    in November 2014.  
    Based on the success thus far, several research groups across    the country are turning their attention to developing    engineered T cells for other cancers, including     solid tumorslike pancreatic and brain cancers.  
    The stage has now been set for greater progress, Dr. Lee    believes.  
    NCI investigators, for example, now have a platform to plug    and play better CARs into that system, without a lot of    additional R&D time, he continued. Everything else should    now come more rapidly.  
Link:
CAR T-Cell Immunotherapy for ALL - National Cancer Institute