Efficacy of idecabtagene vicleucel in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma and prior central nervous system manifestation: A multicenter real-world analysis

IF 14.6 2区 医学 Q1 HEMATOLOGY
HemaSphere Pub Date : 2025-08-18 DOI:10.1002/hem3.70192
Markus Maulhardt, Simon Call, Hristo Boyadzhiev, Anca Maria Albici, Keven Hörster, Amelie Boquoi, Snjezana Janjetovic, Anna Ossami Saidy, Marcel Teichert, Annamaria Brioli, Christian Schultze-Florey, Florian Heidel, Philipp Schindler, Natalie Schub, Enver Aydilek, Matthias Stelljes, Michael Daskalakis, Carolin Krekeler, Justin Hasenkamp, Cyrus Khandanpour, Ulrike Bacher, Hans Christian Reinhardt, Georg Lenz, Friedrich Stölzel, Thomas Pabst, Bastian von Tresckow, Gerald Wulf, Philipp Berning, Evgenii Shumilov
{"title":"Efficacy of idecabtagene vicleucel in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma and prior central nervous system manifestation: A multicenter real-world analysis","authors":"Markus Maulhardt,&nbsp;Simon Call,&nbsp;Hristo Boyadzhiev,&nbsp;Anca Maria Albici,&nbsp;Keven Hörster,&nbsp;Amelie Boquoi,&nbsp;Snjezana Janjetovic,&nbsp;Anna Ossami Saidy,&nbsp;Marcel Teichert,&nbsp;Annamaria Brioli,&nbsp;Christian Schultze-Florey,&nbsp;Florian Heidel,&nbsp;Philipp Schindler,&nbsp;Natalie Schub,&nbsp;Enver Aydilek,&nbsp;Matthias Stelljes,&nbsp;Michael Daskalakis,&nbsp;Carolin Krekeler,&nbsp;Justin Hasenkamp,&nbsp;Cyrus Khandanpour,&nbsp;Ulrike Bacher,&nbsp;Hans Christian Reinhardt,&nbsp;Georg Lenz,&nbsp;Friedrich Stölzel,&nbsp;Thomas Pabst,&nbsp;Bastian von Tresckow,&nbsp;Gerald Wulf,&nbsp;Philipp Berning,&nbsp;Evgenii Shumilov","doi":"10.1002/hem3.70192","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Central nervous system (CNS) involvement in multiple myeloma (MM) is a rare complication associated with poor prognosis and a median overall survival (mOS) between 2 and 7 months.<span><sup>1, 2</sup></span> CNS involvement is characterized by plasma cell infiltration of the CNS parenchyma, meninges, or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).<span><sup>1, 3</sup></span> B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA)-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies have significantly improved the treatment options for patients with relapsed/refractory (r/r) MM.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span> Currently, two CAR T-cell products have been approved for r/r MM, ide-cel (idecabtagene vicleucel) and cilta-cel (ciltacabtagene autoleucel). With ide-cel being the first approved CAR T-cell therapy in r/r MM, it offers the longest clinical experience to date.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Previous experience with CD19-directed CAR T-cells in patients (pts) with r/r large B-cell lymphomas and CNS involvement has demonstrated their ability to cross the blood–brain barrier, as well as to expand and persist in CNS compartments.<span><sup>6-8</sup></span> In contrast, for r/r MM pts with a history of CNS disease (MM-CNS), real-world evidence with respect to the efficacy and safety profiles of CAR T-cells remains limited, as these pts were excluded from the pivotal studies.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span> To address this gap, we sought to evaluate the efficacy and toxicity profiles of BCMA-directed CAR T-cell therapy in MM-CNS pts in a real-world context.</p><p>We conducted a multicenter retrospective study including r/r MM pts undergoing ide-cel treatment between March 2022 and May 2024 at seven German/Swiss tertiary care centers. Pts were grouped by the presence of CNS disease before ide-cel infusion. Only pts with intradural and/or intraparenchymal lesions by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)/computed tomography (CT) brain/spine or detection of myeloma cells in the CSF were regarded as MM-CNS pts. Descriptive and survival analyses, including propensity score matching (PSM) between MM-CNS and non-MM-CNS pts (optimal matching with 1:3 ratio; age at ide-cel, number of prior therapy lines, and IMWG response at ide-cel as covariates), were performed. Clinical data were gathered from the medical records.</p><p>Before CAR T-cell infusion, all patients received lymphodepleting chemotherapy with fludarabine and cyclophosphamide in accordance with guideline recommendations. Grading of cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS) was performed according to the American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy consensus grading for CRS and ICANS.<span><sup>9</sup></span> The CNS response to CAR T-cell therapy was classified as complete remission (CR), partial remission (PR), stable disease (SD), and progressive disease (PD). The serologic response was assessed according to the established IMWG criteria.<span><sup>10</sup></span> The toxicity management guidelines were consistently applied for all pts, irrespective of the presence of CNS manifestations.</p><p>This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of the University of Muenster (2024-068-f-S). Overall survival (OS) was calculated as the time from CAR T-cell infusion to death or last follow-up (FU). Progression-free survival (PFS) was calculated as the time from CAR T-cell infusion to disease progression, death, or last FU.</p><p>In total, 150 r/r MM patients underwent ide-cel therapy in the participating study centers during the study period. Ten (6.7%) pts from five centers met the criteria for CNS disease before CAR-T treatment. Median time from diagnosis to ide-cel infusion for MM-CNS pts was 5.6 years (range: 3.6–13.6), and median time from leukocyte apheresis to CAR-T treatment was 61 days (range: 47–112).</p><p>The median age of MM-CNS pts at CAR-T infusion and the median number of therapy lines before ide-cel were 61 years (range: 47–71 years) and 5 (range: 2–8), respectively. Triple- and penta-refractoriness was documented in 9/10 and 7/10 of the patients, respectively. All patients developed secondary CNS involvement during the disease course, after a median of 3 (range: 1–7) therapy lines. CNS manifestation was detected in one patient during bridging therapy 2 weeks before ide-cel.</p><p>CNS manifestations were characterized by parenchymal lesions (5/10) and/or leptomeningeal manifestations (6/10). CNS myeloma was diagnosed by MRI (3/10), CT (1/10), both MRI and CT (4/10), or a combination of imaging and CSF diagnostics (2/10) (Supporting Information S1: Table 1). Before ide-cel infusion, seven pts received CNS-penetrating systemic myeloma therapies, including immunomodulatory drug (IMiD)-containing regimens (5 pts), anti-CD38 antibody treatments (5 pts), and MTX-based therapies (2 pts). Additionally, radiation therapy was applied in 3/10 cases. Intrathecal therapy was administered to 4/10 of MM-CNS pts. Two pts received a combination of radiation and surgery (Table 1). Supporting Information S1: Table 2 shows applied specific treatments and outcomes of the 10 MM-CNS pts in detail.</p><p>At the time of ide-cel treatment, CR in CNS was documented in 2/10 of pts, 6/10 had a PR, and 2/10 had PD as assessed by MRI/CT brain/spine with or without CSF diagnostics. Serologic response rates at ide-cel infusion were CR in 3/10, VGPR/PR in 5/10, and PD in 2/10 pts (Table 1, Supporting Information S1: Table 2).</p><p>At first response assessment one month post-CAR-T, best serologic responses were as follows: 4/10 CR, 5/10 pts with VGPR/PR, and 1/10 in PD. Regarding CNS disease, 3/10 pts maintained response until last FU (CR: 2, PR: 1), whereas 5/10 pts improved response to CR (4/10) and PR (1/10), respectively. In the two remaining pts, SD (1/10) or PD (1/10) as best response was documented post-ide-cel (Table 1; Figure 1A). Information on CAR T-cell persistence and CSF plasma cell clearance was available in one patient (Patient 8). T cells were detected in CSF taken 30 days post-infusion with approximately 2.8 T cells/µL and 17.9% CAR expression (Supporting Information S2: Figure 1). Along this line, this patient achieved a CR of the spinal CNS manifestation coming from a PR, as evaluated by MRI, along with a serological CR (Figure 1A; Supporting Information S2: Figure 1). Overall, 4/10 pts experienced relapse post-CAR-T. Among these, two pts showed PD/relapse of the CNS disease and serologic relapse (pts #6 and 9), while the remaining two pts (#7 and 5) developed serologic PD/relapse only (Figure 1A).</p><p>Figure 1B depicts Kaplan–Meier estimates for all MM-CNS pts. With a median FU of survivors of 11 months, a median OS of 12.9 months and a median PFS of 10.5 months were observed. To compare outcomes between pts with and without CNS manifestations, we applied PSM, identifying a matched cohort of 24 pts without CNS myeloma. After matching, survival outcomes and serologic response rates were comparable for the MM-CNS cohort and non-CNS cohort (median OS: 13 months [MM-CNS] vs. not reached [non-CNS myeloma], P = 0.52; median PFS: 10.5 vs. 11.3 months, P = 0.76) (Figure 1C). Overall response rates (CR/VGPR/PR) were 75% for both MM-CNS and non-MM-CNS pts (P = 1.00) (Supporting Information S1: Table 3). Nine patients experienced CRS, of which 3 pts (3/9) had CRS Grade 1, 4 pts (4/9) Grade 2, and 2 pts (2/9) Grade 3. Only 2 pts (2/10) developed ICANS, both Grade 1 (Table 1). Of note, no high-grade (3-4) ICANS was documented among MM-CNS patients, which was consistent with the matched cohort of non-CNS pts (0/24) (Supporting Information S1: Table 4). All four deaths occurred due to r/r disease (Figure 1A).</p><p>This real-world analysis evaluates the safety and efficacy of BCMA-directed CAR T- cell therapy in MM pts with CNS disease. There were three main findings. First, we observed that CAR T-cell therapy achieves encouraging response rates in MM-CNS pts, with 8/10 patients showing continued CNS response. Second, our results suggest that outcomes of CAR T-cell therapy in a MM-CNS patient cohort appear to be comparable to a matched cohort of classical non-CNS myeloma pts after CAR-T ide-cel treatment. Nevertheless, statistical non-significance as well as the low number of patients analyzed do not necessarily imply equivalence, and larger studies are needed to validate these findings. Finally, BCMA-directed T-cell lymphocytes measurement in the CSF was performed in one patient, aligning with the rapid clinical and documented radiologic response and confirming their ability to penetrate the blood–brain barrier as well.</p><p>To the best of our knowledge, despite the small patient number, our study represents the largest MM-CNS cohort specifically treated with ide-cel and the largest cohort diagnosed with CNS myeloma before CAR-T treatment.<span><sup>11</sup></span> The available data on post-CAR-T outcomes for MM with CNS disease are limited to smaller case reports, mainly reporting single cases and small retrospective studies.<span><sup>12, 13</sup></span> Although CNS manifestations generally represent a rare complication affecting less than 1% of MM pts, we observed a comparatively high frequency of CNS disease of 6.7% for our cohort.<span><sup>1, 3</sup></span> This may be attributable to improved therapies with subsequent clonal evolution/selection of myeloma cells becoming prone to CNS invasion. The improved survival of MM pts is expected to lead to an increased incidence of CNS myeloma as well.<span><sup>1</sup></span></p><p>Conventional approaches to treat CNS myeloma include radiotherapy, intrathecal and/or systemic chemotherapy, IMiDs, and anti-CD38 directed agents, such as daratumumab, which are capable of crossing the blood–brain barrier.<span><sup>13-15</sup></span> Although being effective in some CNS myeloma cases, the response duration of these agents is often limited to weeks or a few months only.<span><sup>13</sup></span> These treatment approaches are unlikely to achieve long-term remissions, highlighting the potential role of CAR T-cells as a consolidation strategy in this setting.</p><p>An improvement of CNS response after ide-cel was documented in 6 out of 8 (75%) of our pts with active CNS disease, defined as non-CR status at CAR-T. Specifically, two pts with PD of CNS myeloma at the start of ide-cel achieved disease control, presenting with either PR or SD at the first FU. Gaballa et al. reported a 100% CNS response rate by Day 90 post-CAR-T.<span><sup>11</sup></span> We also documented high levels of CAR T-cells at Day 30 in a patient who achieved a rapid response, underscoring the potential persistence of ide-cel post-infusion. This aligns with findings by Wang et al. demonstrating detectable levels of BCMA-directed CAR T-cells in the CSF of a patient with CNS involvement, with levels peaking at Day 8 after CAR-T infusion.<span><sup>12</sup></span></p><p>In fact, Gaballa et al. recently reported 10 r/r MM pts with CNS disease from five centers treated with either ide-cel (<i>n</i> = 6) or cilta-cel (<i>n</i> = 4), whereas two of these pts were diagnosed with CNS myeloma shortly post-CAR-T infusion.<span><sup>11</sup></span> For the 8 pts with confirmed CNS disease before CAR T-cell infusion, the median OS and PFS were 13.3 and 6.3 months, respectively.<span><sup>11</sup></span> Regarding the development of CAR-T-related adverse effects, we and Gaballa et al. both report a few high-grade CRS/ICANS.<span><sup>11</sup></span> Solely two pts in our cohort had CRS Grade 3, compared to none in the Gaballa cohort. We report no high-grade ICANS, whereas Gaballa et al. reported one case with ICANS Grade 3.<span><sup>11</sup></span> A strength of our study is the use of PSM with non-CNS MM patients undergoing ide-cel treatment, which confirmed comparable survival outcomes. Together, our findings and those of Gaballa et al. highlight encouraging response rates to BCMA-directed CAR T-cell therapy among patients with MM and CNS involvement.</p><p>However, we acknowledge that other important potential confounders, such as cytogenetic risk profile, performance status, and prior BCMA exposure, were not included in the PSM analysis but could influence outcomes. Additionally, the FU time was relatively limited, thereby reducing the capability to draw long-term conclusions about the safety and efficacy of CAR T-cell therapy in patients with CNS myeloma.</p><p>Our findings suggest that CAR T-cell therapy can be effective in MM pts with CNS involvement, improving response with a toxicity profile comparable to non-CNS pts. Thus, CNS manifestations in r/r MM should not preclude the use of CAR T-cell treatment for these patients.</p><p><b>Markus Maulhardt</b>: Conceptualization; writing—original draft; investigation; data curation; methodology; formal analysis. <b>Simon Call</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Hristo Boyadzhiev</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Anca Maria Albici</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Keven Hörster</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Amelie Boquoi</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Snjezana Janjetovic</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Anna Ossami Saidy</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Marcel Teichert</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Annamaria Brioli</b>: Investigation. <b>Christian Schultze-Florey</b>: Investigation. <b>Florian Heidel</b>: Investigation; writing—review and editing. <b>Philipp Schindler</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Natalie Schub</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Enver Aydilek</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Matthias Stelljes</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Michael Daskalakis</b>: Investigation; data curation. <b>Carolin Krekeler</b>: Investigation. <b>Justin Hasenkamp</b>: Investigation. <b>Cyrus Khandanpour</b>: Investigation; data curation; writing—review and editing. <b>Ulrike Bacher</b>: Investigation; data curation; writing—review and editing. <b>Hans Christian Reinhardt</b>: Investigation; writing—review and editing. <b>Georg Lenz</b>: Investigation; writing—review and editing. <b>Friedrich Stölzel</b>: Investigation; writing—review and editing. <b>Thomas Pabst</b>: Investigation; writing—review and editing. <b>Bastian von Tresckow</b>: Investigation; writing—review and editing. <b>Gerald Wulf</b>: Investigation; writing—review and editing. <b>Philipp Berning</b>: Conceptualization; investigation; writing—original draft; supervision; methodology; validation; writing—review and editing; software; data curation. <b>Evgenii Shumilov</b>: Conceptualization; investigation; writing—original draft; supervision; methodology; validation; writing—review and editing; data curation.</p><p>A.B. has participated in advisory boards from BMS, Janssen, GSK, Sanofi, AstraZeneca, and Menarini; received honoraria from Menarini; and received honoraria and travel support from BMS, Janssen, GSK, Sanofi, AstraZeneca, Amgen, and Takeda. M.S. has served as a consultant for Pfizer, MSD, BMS, Incyte, Takeda, Astellas, and Amgen; as a speaker for Pfizer, Medac, MSD, Astellas, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Amgen, Novartis, Gilead, Celgene, BMS, AbbVie, and Incyte; has received research funding from Pfizer; and has received travel support from Medac and Pfizer. M.D. received support (travel, accommodations, expenses) from Kite-Gilead, Novartis, Amgen, and Novo Nordisk and served in a consulting or advisory role for Novartis and Alexion Pharma. G.L. received research grants not related to this manuscript from AGIOS, AQUINOX, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Gilead, Janssen, MorphoSys, Novartis, F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd, and Verastem. G.L. received honoraria not related to this manuscript from ADC Therapeutics, AbbVie, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Bayer, BeiGene, BMS, Celgene, Constellation, Genase, Genmab, Gilead, Hexal/Sandoz, Immagene, Incyte, Janssen, Karyopharm, Lilly, Miltenyi, MorphoSys, MSD, NanoString, Novartis, PentixaPharm, Pierre Fabre, F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd, and SOBI. B.v.T. is an advisor or consultant for Allogene, Amgen, BMS/Celgene, Cerus, Gilead Kite, Incyte, IQVIA, Janssen-Cilag, Lilly, MSD, Miltenyi, Novartis, Noscendo, Pentixapharm, Pfizer, Pierre Fabre, Qualworld, Regeneron, Roche, SOBI, and Takeda; has received honoraria from AbbVie, AstraZeneca, BMS/Celgene, Gilead Kite, Incyte, Janssen-Cilag, Lilly, MSD, Novartis, Roche, and Takeda; reports research funding from Esteve (Inst.), MSD (Inst.), Novartis (Inst.), and Takeda (Inst.); reports travel support from AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Gilead Kite, Janssen-Cilag, Lilly, MSD, Pierre Fabre, Roche, Takeda, and Novartis; and is member of steering committees for Regeneron and Takeda. E.S. received honoraria not related to this manuscript from Gilead, Amgen, Sanofi, Oncopeptides, Stemline, Takeda, Pfizer, BMS, and Lilly.</p><p>Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.</p>","PeriodicalId":12982,"journal":{"name":"HemaSphere","volume":"9 8","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":14.6000,"publicationDate":"2025-08-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/hem3.70192","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"HemaSphere","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hem3.70192","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"HEMATOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Central nervous system (CNS) involvement in multiple myeloma (MM) is a rare complication associated with poor prognosis and a median overall survival (mOS) between 2 and 7 months.1, 2 CNS involvement is characterized by plasma cell infiltration of the CNS parenchyma, meninges, or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).1, 3 B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA)-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies have significantly improved the treatment options for patients with relapsed/refractory (r/r) MM.4, 5 Currently, two CAR T-cell products have been approved for r/r MM, ide-cel (idecabtagene vicleucel) and cilta-cel (ciltacabtagene autoleucel). With ide-cel being the first approved CAR T-cell therapy in r/r MM, it offers the longest clinical experience to date.4 Previous experience with CD19-directed CAR T-cells in patients (pts) with r/r large B-cell lymphomas and CNS involvement has demonstrated their ability to cross the blood–brain barrier, as well as to expand and persist in CNS compartments.6-8 In contrast, for r/r MM pts with a history of CNS disease (MM-CNS), real-world evidence with respect to the efficacy and safety profiles of CAR T-cells remains limited, as these pts were excluded from the pivotal studies.4, 5 To address this gap, we sought to evaluate the efficacy and toxicity profiles of BCMA-directed CAR T-cell therapy in MM-CNS pts in a real-world context.

We conducted a multicenter retrospective study including r/r MM pts undergoing ide-cel treatment between March 2022 and May 2024 at seven German/Swiss tertiary care centers. Pts were grouped by the presence of CNS disease before ide-cel infusion. Only pts with intradural and/or intraparenchymal lesions by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)/computed tomography (CT) brain/spine or detection of myeloma cells in the CSF were regarded as MM-CNS pts. Descriptive and survival analyses, including propensity score matching (PSM) between MM-CNS and non-MM-CNS pts (optimal matching with 1:3 ratio; age at ide-cel, number of prior therapy lines, and IMWG response at ide-cel as covariates), were performed. Clinical data were gathered from the medical records.

Before CAR T-cell infusion, all patients received lymphodepleting chemotherapy with fludarabine and cyclophosphamide in accordance with guideline recommendations. Grading of cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS) was performed according to the American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy consensus grading for CRS and ICANS.9 The CNS response to CAR T-cell therapy was classified as complete remission (CR), partial remission (PR), stable disease (SD), and progressive disease (PD). The serologic response was assessed according to the established IMWG criteria.10 The toxicity management guidelines were consistently applied for all pts, irrespective of the presence of CNS manifestations.

This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of the University of Muenster (2024-068-f-S). Overall survival (OS) was calculated as the time from CAR T-cell infusion to death or last follow-up (FU). Progression-free survival (PFS) was calculated as the time from CAR T-cell infusion to disease progression, death, or last FU.

In total, 150 r/r MM patients underwent ide-cel therapy in the participating study centers during the study period. Ten (6.7%) pts from five centers met the criteria for CNS disease before CAR-T treatment. Median time from diagnosis to ide-cel infusion for MM-CNS pts was 5.6 years (range: 3.6–13.6), and median time from leukocyte apheresis to CAR-T treatment was 61 days (range: 47–112).

The median age of MM-CNS pts at CAR-T infusion and the median number of therapy lines before ide-cel were 61 years (range: 47–71 years) and 5 (range: 2–8), respectively. Triple- and penta-refractoriness was documented in 9/10 and 7/10 of the patients, respectively. All patients developed secondary CNS involvement during the disease course, after a median of 3 (range: 1–7) therapy lines. CNS manifestation was detected in one patient during bridging therapy 2 weeks before ide-cel.

CNS manifestations were characterized by parenchymal lesions (5/10) and/or leptomeningeal manifestations (6/10). CNS myeloma was diagnosed by MRI (3/10), CT (1/10), both MRI and CT (4/10), or a combination of imaging and CSF diagnostics (2/10) (Supporting Information S1: Table 1). Before ide-cel infusion, seven pts received CNS-penetrating systemic myeloma therapies, including immunomodulatory drug (IMiD)-containing regimens (5 pts), anti-CD38 antibody treatments (5 pts), and MTX-based therapies (2 pts). Additionally, radiation therapy was applied in 3/10 cases. Intrathecal therapy was administered to 4/10 of MM-CNS pts. Two pts received a combination of radiation and surgery (Table 1). Supporting Information S1: Table 2 shows applied specific treatments and outcomes of the 10 MM-CNS pts in detail.

At the time of ide-cel treatment, CR in CNS was documented in 2/10 of pts, 6/10 had a PR, and 2/10 had PD as assessed by MRI/CT brain/spine with or without CSF diagnostics. Serologic response rates at ide-cel infusion were CR in 3/10, VGPR/PR in 5/10, and PD in 2/10 pts (Table 1, Supporting Information S1: Table 2).

At first response assessment one month post-CAR-T, best serologic responses were as follows: 4/10 CR, 5/10 pts with VGPR/PR, and 1/10 in PD. Regarding CNS disease, 3/10 pts maintained response until last FU (CR: 2, PR: 1), whereas 5/10 pts improved response to CR (4/10) and PR (1/10), respectively. In the two remaining pts, SD (1/10) or PD (1/10) as best response was documented post-ide-cel (Table 1; Figure 1A). Information on CAR T-cell persistence and CSF plasma cell clearance was available in one patient (Patient 8). T cells were detected in CSF taken 30 days post-infusion with approximately 2.8 T cells/µL and 17.9% CAR expression (Supporting Information S2: Figure 1). Along this line, this patient achieved a CR of the spinal CNS manifestation coming from a PR, as evaluated by MRI, along with a serological CR (Figure 1A; Supporting Information S2: Figure 1). Overall, 4/10 pts experienced relapse post-CAR-T. Among these, two pts showed PD/relapse of the CNS disease and serologic relapse (pts #6 and 9), while the remaining two pts (#7 and 5) developed serologic PD/relapse only (Figure 1A).

Figure 1B depicts Kaplan–Meier estimates for all MM-CNS pts. With a median FU of survivors of 11 months, a median OS of 12.9 months and a median PFS of 10.5 months were observed. To compare outcomes between pts with and without CNS manifestations, we applied PSM, identifying a matched cohort of 24 pts without CNS myeloma. After matching, survival outcomes and serologic response rates were comparable for the MM-CNS cohort and non-CNS cohort (median OS: 13 months [MM-CNS] vs. not reached [non-CNS myeloma], P = 0.52; median PFS: 10.5 vs. 11.3 months, P = 0.76) (Figure 1C). Overall response rates (CR/VGPR/PR) were 75% for both MM-CNS and non-MM-CNS pts (P = 1.00) (Supporting Information S1: Table 3). Nine patients experienced CRS, of which 3 pts (3/9) had CRS Grade 1, 4 pts (4/9) Grade 2, and 2 pts (2/9) Grade 3. Only 2 pts (2/10) developed ICANS, both Grade 1 (Table 1). Of note, no high-grade (3-4) ICANS was documented among MM-CNS patients, which was consistent with the matched cohort of non-CNS pts (0/24) (Supporting Information S1: Table 4). All four deaths occurred due to r/r disease (Figure 1A).

This real-world analysis evaluates the safety and efficacy of BCMA-directed CAR T- cell therapy in MM pts with CNS disease. There were three main findings. First, we observed that CAR T-cell therapy achieves encouraging response rates in MM-CNS pts, with 8/10 patients showing continued CNS response. Second, our results suggest that outcomes of CAR T-cell therapy in a MM-CNS patient cohort appear to be comparable to a matched cohort of classical non-CNS myeloma pts after CAR-T ide-cel treatment. Nevertheless, statistical non-significance as well as the low number of patients analyzed do not necessarily imply equivalence, and larger studies are needed to validate these findings. Finally, BCMA-directed T-cell lymphocytes measurement in the CSF was performed in one patient, aligning with the rapid clinical and documented radiologic response and confirming their ability to penetrate the blood–brain barrier as well.

To the best of our knowledge, despite the small patient number, our study represents the largest MM-CNS cohort specifically treated with ide-cel and the largest cohort diagnosed with CNS myeloma before CAR-T treatment.11 The available data on post-CAR-T outcomes for MM with CNS disease are limited to smaller case reports, mainly reporting single cases and small retrospective studies.12, 13 Although CNS manifestations generally represent a rare complication affecting less than 1% of MM pts, we observed a comparatively high frequency of CNS disease of 6.7% for our cohort.1, 3 This may be attributable to improved therapies with subsequent clonal evolution/selection of myeloma cells becoming prone to CNS invasion. The improved survival of MM pts is expected to lead to an increased incidence of CNS myeloma as well.1

Conventional approaches to treat CNS myeloma include radiotherapy, intrathecal and/or systemic chemotherapy, IMiDs, and anti-CD38 directed agents, such as daratumumab, which are capable of crossing the blood–brain barrier.13-15 Although being effective in some CNS myeloma cases, the response duration of these agents is often limited to weeks or a few months only.13 These treatment approaches are unlikely to achieve long-term remissions, highlighting the potential role of CAR T-cells as a consolidation strategy in this setting.

An improvement of CNS response after ide-cel was documented in 6 out of 8 (75%) of our pts with active CNS disease, defined as non-CR status at CAR-T. Specifically, two pts with PD of CNS myeloma at the start of ide-cel achieved disease control, presenting with either PR or SD at the first FU. Gaballa et al. reported a 100% CNS response rate by Day 90 post-CAR-T.11 We also documented high levels of CAR T-cells at Day 30 in a patient who achieved a rapid response, underscoring the potential persistence of ide-cel post-infusion. This aligns with findings by Wang et al. demonstrating detectable levels of BCMA-directed CAR T-cells in the CSF of a patient with CNS involvement, with levels peaking at Day 8 after CAR-T infusion.12

In fact, Gaballa et al. recently reported 10 r/r MM pts with CNS disease from five centers treated with either ide-cel (n = 6) or cilta-cel (n = 4), whereas two of these pts were diagnosed with CNS myeloma shortly post-CAR-T infusion.11 For the 8 pts with confirmed CNS disease before CAR T-cell infusion, the median OS and PFS were 13.3 and 6.3 months, respectively.11 Regarding the development of CAR-T-related adverse effects, we and Gaballa et al. both report a few high-grade CRS/ICANS.11 Solely two pts in our cohort had CRS Grade 3, compared to none in the Gaballa cohort. We report no high-grade ICANS, whereas Gaballa et al. reported one case with ICANS Grade 3.11 A strength of our study is the use of PSM with non-CNS MM patients undergoing ide-cel treatment, which confirmed comparable survival outcomes. Together, our findings and those of Gaballa et al. highlight encouraging response rates to BCMA-directed CAR T-cell therapy among patients with MM and CNS involvement.

However, we acknowledge that other important potential confounders, such as cytogenetic risk profile, performance status, and prior BCMA exposure, were not included in the PSM analysis but could influence outcomes. Additionally, the FU time was relatively limited, thereby reducing the capability to draw long-term conclusions about the safety and efficacy of CAR T-cell therapy in patients with CNS myeloma.

Our findings suggest that CAR T-cell therapy can be effective in MM pts with CNS involvement, improving response with a toxicity profile comparable to non-CNS pts. Thus, CNS manifestations in r/r MM should not preclude the use of CAR T-cell treatment for these patients.

Markus Maulhardt: Conceptualization; writing—original draft; investigation; data curation; methodology; formal analysis. Simon Call: Investigation; data curation. Hristo Boyadzhiev: Investigation; data curation. Anca Maria Albici: Investigation; data curation. Keven Hörster: Investigation; data curation. Amelie Boquoi: Investigation; data curation. Snjezana Janjetovic: Investigation; data curation. Anna Ossami Saidy: Investigation; data curation. Marcel Teichert: Investigation; data curation. Annamaria Brioli: Investigation. Christian Schultze-Florey: Investigation. Florian Heidel: Investigation; writing—review and editing. Philipp Schindler: Investigation; data curation. Natalie Schub: Investigation; data curation. Enver Aydilek: Investigation; data curation. Matthias Stelljes: Investigation; data curation. Michael Daskalakis: Investigation; data curation. Carolin Krekeler: Investigation. Justin Hasenkamp: Investigation. Cyrus Khandanpour: Investigation; data curation; writing—review and editing. Ulrike Bacher: Investigation; data curation; writing—review and editing. Hans Christian Reinhardt: Investigation; writing—review and editing. Georg Lenz: Investigation; writing—review and editing. Friedrich Stölzel: Investigation; writing—review and editing. Thomas Pabst: Investigation; writing—review and editing. Bastian von Tresckow: Investigation; writing—review and editing. Gerald Wulf: Investigation; writing—review and editing. Philipp Berning: Conceptualization; investigation; writing—original draft; supervision; methodology; validation; writing—review and editing; software; data curation. Evgenii Shumilov: Conceptualization; investigation; writing—original draft; supervision; methodology; validation; writing—review and editing; data curation.

A.B. has participated in advisory boards from BMS, Janssen, GSK, Sanofi, AstraZeneca, and Menarini; received honoraria from Menarini; and received honoraria and travel support from BMS, Janssen, GSK, Sanofi, AstraZeneca, Amgen, and Takeda. M.S. has served as a consultant for Pfizer, MSD, BMS, Incyte, Takeda, Astellas, and Amgen; as a speaker for Pfizer, Medac, MSD, Astellas, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Amgen, Novartis, Gilead, Celgene, BMS, AbbVie, and Incyte; has received research funding from Pfizer; and has received travel support from Medac and Pfizer. M.D. received support (travel, accommodations, expenses) from Kite-Gilead, Novartis, Amgen, and Novo Nordisk and served in a consulting or advisory role for Novartis and Alexion Pharma. G.L. received research grants not related to this manuscript from AGIOS, AQUINOX, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Gilead, Janssen, MorphoSys, Novartis, F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd, and Verastem. G.L. received honoraria not related to this manuscript from ADC Therapeutics, AbbVie, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Bayer, BeiGene, BMS, Celgene, Constellation, Genase, Genmab, Gilead, Hexal/Sandoz, Immagene, Incyte, Janssen, Karyopharm, Lilly, Miltenyi, MorphoSys, MSD, NanoString, Novartis, PentixaPharm, Pierre Fabre, F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd, and SOBI. B.v.T. is an advisor or consultant for Allogene, Amgen, BMS/Celgene, Cerus, Gilead Kite, Incyte, IQVIA, Janssen-Cilag, Lilly, MSD, Miltenyi, Novartis, Noscendo, Pentixapharm, Pfizer, Pierre Fabre, Qualworld, Regeneron, Roche, SOBI, and Takeda; has received honoraria from AbbVie, AstraZeneca, BMS/Celgene, Gilead Kite, Incyte, Janssen-Cilag, Lilly, MSD, Novartis, Roche, and Takeda; reports research funding from Esteve (Inst.), MSD (Inst.), Novartis (Inst.), and Takeda (Inst.); reports travel support from AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Gilead Kite, Janssen-Cilag, Lilly, MSD, Pierre Fabre, Roche, Takeda, and Novartis; and is member of steering committees for Regeneron and Takeda. E.S. received honoraria not related to this manuscript from Gilead, Amgen, Sanofi, Oncopeptides, Stemline, Takeda, Pfizer, BMS, and Lilly.

Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.

Abstract Image

idecabtagene微核治疗复发/难治性多发性骨髓瘤和既往中枢神经系统表现患者的疗效:一项多中心现实世界分析
多发性骨髓瘤(MM)累及中枢神经系统(CNS)是一种罕见的并发症,预后差,中位总生存期(mOS)在2至7个月之间。1,2中枢神经系统受累的特征是浆细胞浸润中枢神经系统实质、脑膜或脑脊液(CSF)。1,3 b细胞成熟抗原(BCMA)靶向嵌合抗原受体(CAR) t细胞疗法显著改善了复发/难治性(r/r) MM患者的治疗选择。目前,两种CAR - t细胞产品已被批准用于r/r MM, ide- cell (idecabtagene vicleucel)和cilta- cell (ciltacabtagene autoleucel)。ide-cel是首个被批准用于治疗r/r MM的CAR - t细胞疗法,它提供了迄今为止最长的临床经验cd19靶向CAR - t细胞治疗r/r大b细胞淋巴瘤和中枢神经系统累及患者的以往经验表明,它们能够穿过血脑屏障,并在中枢神经系统室中扩展和持续存在。6-8相反,对于有中枢神经系统疾病史(MM-CNS)的r/r MM患者,关于CAR - t细胞的有效性和安全性的真实证据仍然有限,因为这些患者被排除在关键研究之外。4,5为了解决这一差距,我们试图在现实环境中评估bcma定向CAR - t细胞治疗MM-CNS患者的疗效和毒性。我们进行了一项多中心回顾性研究,包括在2022年3月至2024年5月期间在7个德国/瑞士三级保健中心接受idecell治疗的r/r MM患者。根据注射前是否存在中枢神经系统疾病对患者进行分组。只有经脑/脊柱磁共振成像(MRI)/计算机断层扫描(CT)或脑脊液中检测到骨髓瘤细胞的硬膜内和/或肺实质内病变的患者被视为MM-CNS患者。描述性和生存分析,包括MM-CNS和非MM-CNS患者之间的倾向评分匹配(PSM)(最佳匹配比例为1:3;idecell年龄、既往治疗系数和idecell的IMWG反应(作为协变量)。从医疗记录中收集临床数据。在CAR - t细胞输注之前,所有患者都按照指南建议接受氟达拉滨和环磷酰胺的淋巴细胞消耗化疗。细胞因子释放综合征(CRS)和免疫效应细胞相关神经毒性综合征(ICANS)的分级是根据美国移植和细胞治疗学会对CRS和ICANS的共识分级进行的。CNS对CAR - t细胞治疗的反应分为完全缓解(CR)、部分缓解(PR)、疾病稳定(SD)和疾病进展(PD)。根据所建立的IMWG标准评估血清学反应毒性管理指南一致适用于所有患者,无论是否存在中枢神经系统表现。本研究已获得明斯特大学机构审查委员会批准(2024-068-f-S)。总生存期(OS)计算为CAR - t细胞输注至死亡或最后一次随访(FU)的时间。无进展生存期(PFS)计算为从CAR - t细胞输注到疾病进展、死亡或最后一次FU的时间。在研究期间,共有150名r/r MM患者在参与研究中心接受了细胞疗法。来自5个中心的10例(6.7%)患者在CAR-T治疗前符合中枢神经系统疾病的标准。MM-CNS患者从诊断到细胞输注的中位时间为5.6年(范围:3.6-13.6),从白细胞分离到CAR-T治疗的中位时间为61天(范围:47-112)。CAR-T输注时MM-CNS患者的中位年龄为61岁(范围47-71岁),接受ide- cell治疗前的中位治疗数为5岁(范围2-8岁)。三难治性和五难治性分别为9/10和7/10的患者。所有患者在病程中均出现继发性中枢神经系统受累,中位数为3(范围:1-7)个治疗线。1例患者在ide- cell前2周桥接治疗时发现中枢神经系统表现。中枢神经系统表现以实质病变(5/10)和/或轻脑膜表现(6/10)为特征。中枢神经系统骨髓瘤通过MRI(3/10)、CT(1/10)、MRI和CT同时诊断(4/10)或影像学和脑脊液诊断联合诊断(2/10)诊断(支持信息S1:表1)。在ide细胞输注之前,7例患者接受了穿透中枢神经系统的系统性骨髓瘤治疗,包括含免疫调节药物(IMiD)的方案(5例),抗cd38抗体治疗(5例)和基于mtx的治疗(2例)。另外,3/10的病例应用了放射治疗。4/10 MM-CNS患者接受鞘内治疗。2名患者接受放疗和手术联合治疗(表1)。支持信息S1:表2详细显示了10例MM-CNS患者的应用特异性治疗和结果。 在idecell治疗时,2/10的患者有中枢神经系统CR记录,6/10有PR, 2/10有PD,通过MRI/CT脑/脊柱诊断或不诊断脑脊液。细胞输注的血清学反应率为3/10,VGPR/PR为5/10,PD为2/10(表1,支持信息S1:表2)。在car - t后1个月的首次反应评估中,最佳血清学反应如下:4/10 CR, 5/10 VGPR/PR, 1/10 PD。对于中枢神经系统疾病,3/10的患者在最后一次FU前保持了应答(CR: 2, PR: 1),而5/10的患者分别改善了CR(4/10)和PR(1/10)的应答。在剩下的两个患者中,SD(1/10)或PD(1/10)作为最佳反应被记录在细胞后(表1;图1 a)。1例患者(患者8)获得了CAR - t细胞持久性和脑脊液浆细胞清除率的信息。注射后30天,在脑脊液中检测到约2.8个T细胞/µL, 17.9%的CAR表达(支持信息S2:图1)。沿着这条线,通过MRI评估,该患者获得了来自PR的脊髓中枢神经系统表现的CR,以及血清学CR(图1A;支持信息S2:图1)。总的来说,4/10的患者在car - t后复发。其中,2名患者出现中枢神经系统疾病PD/复发和血清学复发(6号和9号),而其余2名患者(7号和5号)仅出现血清学PD/复发(图1A)。图1B描述了所有MM-CNS点的Kaplan-Meier估计。中位FU存活时间为11个月,中位OS为12.9个月,中位PFS为10.5个月。为了比较有和没有中枢神经系统表现的患者之间的结果,我们应用PSM,确定了24名没有中枢神经系统骨髓瘤的患者的匹配队列。配对后,MM-CNS组和非cns组的生存结果和血清学反应率具有可比性(中位生存期:13个月[MM-CNS] vs.未达到[非cns骨髓瘤],P = 0.52;中位PFS: 10.5 vs. 11.3个月,P = 0.76)(图1C)。MM-CNS和非MM-CNS患者的总有效率(CR/VGPR/PR)均为75% (P = 1.00)(支持信息S1:表3)。9例患者出现CRS,其中3例(3/9)为CRS 1级,4例(4/9)为CRS 2级,2例(2/9)为CRS 3级。只有2名患者(2/10)发展为ICANS,均为1级(表1)。值得注意的是,MM-CNS患者中没有记录到高级别(3-4)ICANS,这与非cns患者(0/24)的匹配队列一致(支持信息S1:表4)。所有4例死亡都是由r/r疾病造成的(图1A)。这项现实世界分析评估了bcma导向的CAR - T细胞治疗中枢神经系统疾病MM患者的安全性和有效性。主要有三个发现。首先,我们观察到CAR - t细胞治疗在MM-CNS患者中取得了令人鼓舞的应答率,8/10的患者表现出持续的CNS应答。其次,我们的研究结果表明,CAR- t细胞治疗在MM-CNS患者队列中的结果似乎与CAR- t细胞治疗后的经典非cns骨髓瘤患者的匹配队列相当。然而,统计上无显著性以及分析的患者数量少并不一定意味着等效,需要更大规模的研究来验证这些发现。最后,在一名患者的脑脊液中进行bcma定向t细胞淋巴细胞测量,与快速临床和记录的放射学反应一致,并证实了它们穿透血脑屏障的能力。据我们所知,尽管患者人数较少,但我们的研究代表了CAR-T治疗前确诊为CNS骨髓瘤的最大的CAR-T治疗MM-CNS队列关于伴有中枢神经系统疾病的MM患者car - t后预后的现有数据仅限于较小的病例报告,主要是报告单个病例和小型回顾性研究。12,13尽管中枢神经系统表现通常是一种罕见的并发症,影响不到1%的MM患者,但我们观察到,在我们的队列中,中枢神经系统疾病的发病率相对较高,为6.7%。这可能是由于治疗方法的改进,随后骨髓瘤细胞的克隆进化/选择变得容易侵袭中枢神经系统。多发性骨髓瘤患者生存率的提高预计也会导致中枢神经系统骨髓瘤发病率的增加。治疗中枢神经系统骨髓瘤的传统方法包括放疗、鞘内和/或全身化疗、IMiDs和抗cd38定向药物,如能够穿过血脑屏障的daratumumab。虽然对某些中枢神经系统骨髓瘤病例有效,但这些药物的反应持续时间通常仅为几周或几个月这些治疗方法不太可能实现长期缓解,这突出了CAR -t细胞在这种情况下作为巩固策略的潜在作用。在8例活动性中枢神经系统疾病患者中,有6例(75%)在CAR-T治疗后中枢神经系统反应得到改善。 具体来说,两名在ide- cell开始时患有中枢神经系统骨髓瘤PD的患者实现了疾病控制,在第一次FU时出现PR或SD。Gaballa等人报道car - t- 11后第90天的中枢神经系统缓解率为100%我们还记录了在第30天获得快速反应的患者的高水平CAR - t细胞,强调了输注后ide- cell的潜在持久性。这与Wang等人的研究结果一致,他们发现在中枢神经系统受损伤患者的脑脊液中可检测到bcma导向的CAR- t细胞水平,在CAR- t输注后第8天达到峰值。事实上,Gaballa等人最近报道了来自5个中心的10例中枢神经系统疾病的r/r MM患者,分别接受了细胞治疗(n = 6)或细胞治疗(n = 4),其中2例患者在car - t输注后不久被诊断为中枢神经系统骨髓瘤在CAR - t细胞输注前确诊为中枢神经系统疾病的8例患者,中位OS和PFS分别为13.3个月和6.3个月关于car - t相关不良反应的发生,我们和Gaballa等人都报道了一些高级别的CRS/ icans在我们的队列中只有2名患者的CRS为3级,而在Gaballa队列中没有。我们没有报道高级别ICANS,而Gaballa等人报道了一例ICANS等级为3.11的病例。我们研究的优势是PSM用于非中枢神经系统MM患者接受细胞治疗,证实了可比的生存结果。总之,我们的研究结果和Gaballa等人的研究结果强调,在MM和中枢神经系统受损伤的患者中,bcma定向CAR - t细胞治疗的有效率令人鼓舞。然而,我们承认其他重要的潜在混杂因素,如细胞遗传学风险特征、表现状态和既往BCMA暴露,未包括在PSM分析中,但可能影响结果。此外,FU时间相对有限,从而降低了CAR -t细胞治疗中枢神经系统骨髓瘤患者安全性和有效性的长期结论的能力。我们的研究结果表明,CAR - t细胞治疗可以有效地治疗中枢神经系统受损伤的MM患者,改善疗效,毒性与非中枢神经系统患者相当。因此,r/r MM的中枢神经系统表现不应排除对这些患者使用CAR - t细胞治疗。Markus Maulhardt:概念化;原创作品草案;调查;数据管理;方法;正式的分析。西蒙电话:调查;数据管理。Hristo Boyadzhiev:调查;数据管理。Anca Maria Albici:调查;数据管理。凯文Hörster:调查;数据管理。Amelie Boquoi:调查;数据管理。Snjezana Janjetovic:调查;数据管理。安娜·奥萨米·赛迪:调查;数据管理。Marcel Teichert:调查;数据管理。安娜玛丽亚·布里奥利:调查。克里斯蒂安·舒尔茨-弗洛里:调查。弗洛里安·海德尔:调查;写作-审查和编辑。菲利普·辛德勒:调查;数据管理。娜塔莉·舒布:调查;数据管理。Enver Aydilek:调查;数据管理。Matthias Stelljes:调查;数据管理。Michael Daskalakis:调查;数据管理。卡洛琳·克莱勒:调查。贾斯廷·哈森坎普:调查。Cyrus Khandanpour:调查;数据管理;写作-审查和编辑。乌尔里克·巴彻:调查;数据管理;写作-审查和编辑。汉斯·克里斯蒂安·莱因哈特:调查;写作-审查和编辑。乔治·伦茨:调查;写作-审查和编辑。Friedrich Stölzel:调查;写作-审查和编辑。托马斯·帕布斯特:调查;写作-审查和编辑。巴斯蒂安·冯·特雷斯科夫:调查;写作-审查和编辑。Gerald Wulf:调查;写作-审查和编辑。菲利普·伯宁:概念化;调查;原创作品草案;监督;方法;验证;写作——审阅和编辑;软件;数据管理。Evgenii Shumilov:概念化;调查;原创作品草案;监督;方法;验证;写作——审阅和编辑;curation.A.B数据。曾参与BMS、杨森、GSK、赛诺菲、阿斯利康和美纳里尼等公司的咨询委员会;接受美纳里尼的酬金;并获得了BMS、杨森、GSK、赛诺菲、阿斯利康、安进和武田的酬金和差旅支持。ms .曾担任Pfizer, MSD, BMS, Incyte, Takeda, Astellas和Amgen的顾问;作为辉瑞、Medac、MSD、Astellas、Jazz Pharmaceuticals、Amgen、Novartis、Gilead、Celgene、BMS、AbbVie和Incyte的演讲嘉宾;获得辉瑞公司的研究经费;并得到了Medac和辉瑞公司的旅行支持。M.D.获得Kite-Gilead、Novartis、Amgen和Novo Nordisk的支持(旅行、住宿、费用),并担任Novartis和Alexion Pharma的咨询或顾问职务。G.L.从AGIOS、AQUINOX、AstraZeneca、Bayer、Gilead、Janssen、MorphoSys、Novartis、F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd和Verastem获得了与本文无关的研究经费。基准线 从ADC Therapeutics、AbbVie、Amgen、AstraZeneca、Bayer、BeiGene、BMS、Celgene、Constellation、Genase、Genmab、Gilead、Hexal/Sandoz、Immagene、Incyte、Janssen、Karyopharm、Lilly、Miltenyi、MorphoSys、MSD、NanoString、Novartis、PentixaPharm、Pierre Fabre、F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd和SOBI获得与本文无关的报酬。B.v.T.是Allogene、Amgen、BMS/Celgene、Cerus、Gilead Kite、Incyte、IQVIA、Janssen-Cilag、Lilly、MSD、Miltenyi、Novartis、Noscendo、Pentixapharm、Pfizer、Pierre Fabre、Qualworld、Regeneron、Roche、SOBI和武田的顾问或顾问;获得艾伯维、阿斯利康、BMS/Celgene、吉利德Kite、Incyte、Janssen-Cilag、礼来、默沙明、诺华、罗氏和武田的酬金;报告来自Esteve (institute .)、MSD (institute .)、Novartis (institute .)和武田(Takeda)的研究资助;报告来自艾伯维、阿斯利康、吉利德、杨森、礼来、默沙东、皮尔法伯、罗氏、武田和诺华的差旅支持;同时也是再生元和武田的指导委员会成员。E.S.从吉利德、安进、赛诺菲、Oncopeptides、Stemline、武田、辉瑞、BMS和礼来公司收到了与本文无关的酬金。由Projekt DEAL支持和组织的开放获取资金。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
HemaSphere
HemaSphere Medicine-Hematology
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
4.50%
发文量
2776
审稿时长
7 weeks
期刊介绍: HemaSphere, as a publication, is dedicated to disseminating the outcomes of profoundly pertinent basic, translational, and clinical research endeavors within the field of hematology. The journal actively seeks robust studies that unveil novel discoveries with significant ramifications for hematology. In addition to original research, HemaSphere features review articles and guideline articles that furnish lucid synopses and discussions of emerging developments, along with recommendations for patient care. Positioned as the foremost resource in hematology, HemaSphere augments its offerings with specialized sections like HemaTopics and HemaPolicy. These segments engender insightful dialogues covering a spectrum of hematology-related topics, including digestible summaries of pivotal articles, updates on new therapies, deliberations on European policy matters, and other noteworthy news items within the field. Steering the course of HemaSphere are Editor in Chief Jan Cools and Deputy Editor in Chief Claire Harrison, alongside the guidance of an esteemed Editorial Board comprising international luminaries in both research and clinical realms, each representing diverse areas of hematologic expertise.
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:604180095
Book学术官方微信