CD19, CD20 chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR T) cell therapy has shown promising results for the treatment of relapsed or refractory hematological malignancies. Best results have been reported in acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients with a complete response rate above 80%. Patients who received donor-derived CAR T cells for the relapsed malignancy after stem cell transplantation (allogenic hematopoietic stem cell transplant) were identified from the published trials. A total of 72 patients from seven studies were treated with donor-derived CAR T cells. Only five out of 72 patients (6.9%) developed graft versus host disease. Use of donor-derived CAR T cell for relapse prophylaxis, minimal residual disease clearance or salvage from relapse is therefore highly effective, and risk of graft versus host disease flare is very low. Side effects include cytokine release syndrome, tumor lysis syndrome, B-cell aplasia along with CNS toxicity.
Treatment of patients with relapsed or refractory lymphoma may require allogenic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT), but treatment of post-transplant relapse disease remains very challenging. Donor lymphocyte infusion and blinatumomab have been used with limited success for the treatment of relapse. Initial data on donor-derived CAR T cells has shown this modality to be safe and highly effective in various hematological malignancies. We present a case of a patient with highly refractory, transformed follicular lymphoma who failed both autologous and allogenic HSCT. Patient achieved long-lasting complete remission with the use of donor origin CD19 CAR T-cell therapy, without any evidence of graft-versus-host disease flare. Our patient later developed disseminated coccidioidomycosis and persistent hypogammaglobulinemia. Immunotherapy using CD19 CAR T cells can be a highly effective salvage modality, especially in cases of focal lymphoma relapse. Long-term immunosuppression secondary to B cell lymphopenia, hypogammaglobulinemia, immunoglobulin subclass deficiency, fungal infections and other infectious complications need to be monitored and promptly treated as indicated.
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