Genetic engineering of T cells using a chimeric antigen receptor targeting CD19 antigen (CAR19) is now a well-established treatment of B cell malignancies. While cellular immunotherapies are entering front line treatment, substantial limitations currently hamper the broad application of adoptive T cell therapies in diverse patient population including dysfunctional starting material, lack of product consistency and purity post genetic engineering and inefficient quantity produced for true on-demand availability. FT819 is a first-of-kind off-the-shelf CAR19-T cell product generated from a renewable pluripotent stem cells for large-scale clinical manufacturing. We previously reported the engineering and characterization of the FT819 clonal master cell bank (MCB) derived from a single cell comprising targeted integration of a novel CD19 1XX CAR into the T-cell receptor (TCR) α constant locus to provide optimally regulated CAR expression and elimination of graft versus host (GvH) response. Here we preview the nonclinical study for the original investigational new drug application of FT819. Derived in a manufacturing process analogous to pharmaceutical drug product development, pilot runs from the MCB demonstrated FT819 can be consistently and uniformly manufactured in cGMP compliance, cryopreserved at clinical scale to support off-the-shelf clinical application with greater than 1e5 fold increase in cellular yield from the starting MCB and can be thawed and directly used for facilitated treatment. Repeatedly, FT819 displayed a uniform product profile of ≥95% CAR+, TCR-, CD45+, CD7+ and CD3+ [intracellular] with majority of CD8 T cells expressing CD8β. FT819 global gene expression profile displayed high similarity to primary CAR19-T cells confirming its identity as a T lymphocyte. Functional assessment demonstrated that FT819 possesses potent antigen specific cytolytic activity against leukemia and lymphoma cell lines (p=0.0004). Additional specificity studies demonstrated on-target, off-tumor cytolysis of CD19+ B cells in mixed lymphocyte reaction assay (85% lysis of CD19+ B cells versus < 2% lysis of T cells). Inability of FT819 to produce a GvH response was confirmed in a co-culture assay with anti-TCR crosslinking antibodies. Disseminated leukemia xenograft mouse studies demonstrated the ability of directly thawed and infused FT819 to control tumor growth (p=0.0003 at day 21). In a systemic administered leukemia model FT819 also showed sustained localization in the bone marrow up to 45 days post injection. Ongoing in vivo studies will assess long-term survival and avoidance of GvH disease. Collectively, these studies demonstrate that FT819 is a potent, consistent and uniform CAR19 T cell product and can be effectively and safely used off-the-shelf in the treatment of B cell malignancies with an original Phase 1 clinical trial planned in 2020. Citation Format: Mili Mandal, Raedun Clarke, Sjoukje van der Stegen, Chia-Wei Chang, Yi-Shin Lai, Alec Witty, Mushtaq Husain, Cheng-Jang Wu, Bi-Huei Yang, Chad Dufaud, Gloria Hsia, Helena Shaked, Laurel Stokely, Helen Chu, Mochtar Pribadi, Gilberto Hernandez, Jason ORourke, Alma Gutierrez, Ramzey Abujarour, Tom Lee, Jolanta Stefanski, Juan Zhen, Meilan Wu, Isabelle Riviere, Michel Sadelain, Bahram Valamehr. FT819 path to IND: First-of-kind off-the-shelf CAR19 T-cell for B cell malignancies [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research 2020; 2020 Apr 27-28 and Jun 22-24. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2020;80(16 Suppl):Abstract nr 3245.
FT819 is a first-of-kind, allogeneic, off-the-shelf CAR T-cell therapy derived from a clonal master induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) line precisely engineered to insert a novel 1XX anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) under the regulation of the T-cell receptor alpha constant (TRAC) locus for optimized control of anti-tumor activity and to completely delete T-cell receptor (TCR) expression to eliminate the potential of graft-versus-host disease (GvHD). Unlike conventional allogeneic CAR T-cell therapies which require repeatedly sourcing of T cells from various donors as the starting material, the use of a clonal master engineered iPSC line serves as a renewable starting cell source and ensures routine mass production of a uniformly engineered, homogenous CAR T-cell product for broad patient access. T cell-derived iPSCs were generated using a proprietary non-integrating cellular reprogramming system and genetically modified to integrate a novel anti-CD19 1XX CAR into both alleles of the TRAC gene. After single cell subcloning, each engineered iPSC clone was screened for multiple critical quality attributes including pluripotency, identity, genomic stability, cassette integration, on/off-target integration, T-cell differentiation propensity, and CAR T-cell function. Accordingly, the ideal single cell-derived engineered iPSC clone was selected as the clonal master iPSC line for FT819 and was converted into a master cell bank (MCB). The iPSC MCB serves as a renewable source for the routine GMP manufacture of FT819 drug product. The FT819 production process consists of three stages: 1) generation of CD34-expressing hematopoietic progenitor cells from iPSCs (>90% CD34+ cells post enrichment); 2) lineage-specification to T cells followed by T-cell expansion (>5e5 fold expansion); and 3) fill/finish and cryopreservation of the drug product. As an example, in an initial small-scale manufacturing campaign, a total of 2.5 × 10 10 FT819 CAR T-cells were generated and filled and finished starting from one vial of the MCB. The FT819 drug product was tested on safety, identity, purity, and potency. The final product was comprised of CD45+CD7+ lymphocytes (>99%), with homogeneous CAR expression (>99% CAR+) and lacking expression of TCRαβ (not detected) on the cell surface. Importantly, there were no residual iPSCs detected in the FT819 drug product. The FT819 drug product exhibited potent and consistent effector function against NALM6 leukemia cells. The FT819 drug product is currently being used in a landmark Phase I study (NCT04629729), the first-ever iPSC-derived T-cell therapy to undergo clinical investigation, for the treatment of patients with relapsed/refractory B-cell lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia and precursor B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In summary, FT819 is a first-of-kind, off-the-shelf, CAR T-cell therapy uniquely derived from a clonal multiplexed-engineered master iPSC line. The novel manufacturing paradigm enables mass production of a uniformly engineered, homogenous cell therapy product that is available on-demand for broad patient access. A multi-center Phase 1 study of FT819 is currently ongoing for the treatment of B-cell malignancies. Key Words: cancer immunotherapy, cell therapy, CAR-T, CD19, allogeneic, induced pluripotent stem cell, iPSC, clonal master iPSC line, engineered, off-the-shelf, cGMP, production, manufacturing, FT819 Disclosures Yuan: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Clarke: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Lai: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Chang: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Yang: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Hsia: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Abujarour: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Lee: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. van der Stegen: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Shaked: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Jalloh: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Moreno: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. ORourke: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Sung: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Gutierrez: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Rezner: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Eberhart: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Magdaleno: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Farnan: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Plavsic: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Bressi: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Rivière: Centre for Commercialization of Cancer Immunotherapy: Other: Provision of Services; Fate Therapeutics: Other: Provision of Services, Patents & Royalties; The Georgia Tech Research Corporation (GTRC): Other: Provision of Services (uncompensated); FloDesign Sonics: Other: Provision of Services; Juno Therapeutics: Patents & Royalties. Valamehr: Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment.
The development of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapeutics is widely recognized as a significant advancement for the treatment of cancer. However, several obstacles currently impede the broad use of CAR T cells, including the inherent process variability, cost of manufacturing, the absolute requirement for precise and uniform genetic editing in the allogeneic setting, and the challenge to keep pace with clonal heterogeneity and tumor growth. Utilizing our previously described induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived T (iT) cell platform, we illustrate here the unique ability to address these challenges by creating a consistent CAR iT cell product that can be repeatedly manufactured in large quantities from a renewable iPSC master cell bank that has been engineered to mitigate the occurrence of graft versus host disease (GvHD), antigen escape and tumor relapse. Utilizing our proprietary cellular reprogramming and engineering platform and stage-specific T cell differentiation protocol, we demonstrate that iPSC can be engineered at the single cell level to generate a fully characterized clonal iPSC line, which can then be accessed routinely to yield CAR iT cells in a highly scalable manufacturing process (>100,000 fold expansion). Through bi-allelic targeting of a CAR into the T cell receptor alpha constant (TRAC) region, we generated CAR iT cells with uniform CAR expression (99.0 ± 0.5% CAR+) and complete elimination of T cell receptor (TCR) expression to avoid GvHD in the allogeneic setting. We elected to utilize the 1XX-CAR configuration, which has demonstrated superior anti-tumor performance relative to other CAR designs and when introduced into iT cells displayed enhanced antigen specificity (% specific cytotoxicity at E:T=10:1, antigen positive group: 86.4 ± 7.8; antigen null group: 8.9 ± 3.5). To enhance persistence without reliance on exogenous cytokine support, we engineered signaling-fusion complexes, including IL-7 receptor fusion (RF), into iPSC and studied its impact on iT phenotype, persistence, and efficacy. In vitro, IL-7RF clones demonstrated improved anti-tumor activity in a serial antigen dependent tumor challenge assay (Day 10, relative tumor counts, IL-7RF group: 1.95 ± 0.01; control group: 57.56 ± 4.55, P<0.000001). In a preclinical in vivo model of disseminated leukemia, IL-7RF clones demonstrate enhanced tumor growth inhibition (Day 34, Log [BLI], IL-7RF group: 6.68 ± 1.93; control group: 9.99 ± 0.23, P=0.0143). We next investigated a unique strategy to incorporate multi-antigen targeting potential into anti-CD19 1XX CAR iT cells with the addition of a high-affinity non-cleavable CD16 (hnCD16) Fc receptor. The combination of hnCD16 with anti-CD19 1XX CAR culminated in iT cells capable of multi-antigen specificity through combinatorial use with monoclonal antibodies to tackle antigen escape. Utilizing CD19 negative leukemia cells as targets, superior antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) was demonstrated by the combination of hnCD16 CAR iT and Rituximab (% specific cytotoxicity at E:T=1:1, hnCD16 group + Rituximab: 75.64 ± 2.12; control group + Rituximab: 16.98 ± 3.87, P<0.001). To address T cell fitness, the role of CD38 knockout (KO) in T cells was investigated, which we have previously shown to mediate NK cell resistance to oxidative stress induced apoptosis. CD38 gene was disrupted at the iPSC stage to generate 1XX-CAR T cells that lack CD38 expression (% CD38+ population, CD38WT group: 69.67 ± 24.34; CD38KO group: 0.12 ± 0.11) and upon antigen mediated stimulation, CD38KO CAR iT cells showed higher percentages of degranulation (2.3-fold increase in CD107a/b), and IFNγ (4.1-fold increase) and TNFα (2.5-fold increase) production. Antigen specific in vitro tumor killing also was enhanced in CD38KO CAR iT cells (EC50, 3.2-fold decrease). Lastly, to avoid the potential host-mediated rejection, the inclusion of allogeneic defense receptor (ADR) which has been shown to significantly reduce host-mediated rejection will be discussed. Collectively, the described studies demonstrate that iPSCs are an ideal cellular source to generate large-quantities of uniformly multi-edited off-the-shelf CAR T cell products that include a best-in-class CAR design, enhanced product modalities, and complete elimination of TCR expression to avoid the potential of GvHD while maintaining high anti-tumor efficacy in allogeneic setting. Disclosures Hsia: Fate Therapeutics Inc.: Current Employment. Clarke:Fate Therapeutics Inc.: Current Employment, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company. Lee:Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Robbins:Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Denholtz:Fate Therapeutics, Inc: Current Employment. Hanok:Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Carron:Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Navarrete:Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. ORourke:Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Sung:Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Gentile:Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Nguyen:Fate Therapeutics, Inc.: Current Employment. Valamehr:Fate Therapeutics, Inc: Current Employment, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.