Clinical outcomes and microenvironment profiling in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma patients with extramedullary disease receiving anti-BCMA CAR T-cell-based therapy
Yuekun Qi, Hujun Li, Kunming Qi, Feng Zhu, Hai Cheng, Wei Chen, Zhiling Yan, Depeng Li, Wei Sang, Xiaoming Fei, Weiying Gu, Yuqing Miao, Hongming Huang, Ying Wang, Tingting Qiu, Jianlin Qiao, Bin Pan, Ming Shi, Gang Wang, Zhenyu Li, Junnian Zheng, Kailin Xu, Jiang Cao
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma patients with extramedullary disease (EMD) have unfavorable prognosis and lack effective therapy. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell activities in EMD have yet to be determined; how EMD-specific microenvironment influences the clinical outcomes of CAR T-cell therapy remains of great interest. In this prospective cohort study, patients with histologically confirmed extra-osseous EMD were enrolled and treated with combined anti-BCMA and anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy from May 2017 to September 2023. Thirty-one patients were included in the study. Overall response occurred in 90.3% of medullary disease and 64.5% of EMD (p = .031). Discrepancies in treatment response were noted between medullary and extramedullary diseases, with EMD exhibiting suboptimal and delayed response, as well as shortened response duration. With a median follow-up of 25.3 months, the median progression-free and overall survival were 5.0 and 9.7 months, respectively. Landmark analysis demonstrated that progression within 6 months post-infusion is strongly associated with an increased risk of death (HR = 4.58; p = .029). Compared with non-EMD patients, patients with EMD showed inferior survival outcomes. Unique CAR-associated local toxicities at EMD were seen in 22.6% patients and correlated with the occurrence and severity of systemic cytokine release syndrome. To the cutoff date, 65% treated patients experienced EMD progression, primarily in the form of BCMA+ progression. The pretherapy EMD immunosuppressive microenvironment, characterized by infiltration of exhausted CD8+ T cells, was associated with inferior clinical outcomes. CAR T cells have therapeutic activity in relapsed/refractory EMD, but the long-term survival benefits may be limited. EMD-specific microenvironment potentially impacts treatment. Further efforts are needed to extend EMD remission and improve long-term outcomes.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Hematology offers extensive coverage of experimental and clinical aspects of blood diseases in humans and animal models. The journal publishes original contributions in both non-malignant and malignant hematological diseases, encompassing clinical and basic studies in areas such as hemostasis, thrombosis, immunology, blood banking, and stem cell biology. Clinical translational reports highlighting innovative therapeutic approaches for the diagnosis and treatment of hematological diseases are actively encouraged.The American Journal of Hematology features regular original laboratory and clinical research articles, brief research reports, critical reviews, images in hematology, as well as letters and correspondence.