With the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of four CD19-and one BCMA-targeted chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) therapy for B cell malignancies, CAR T cell therapy has finally reached the status of a medicinal product. The successful manufacturing of autologous CAR T cell products is a key requirement for this promising treatment modality. By analyzing the composition of 214 apheresis products from 210 subjects across eight disease indications, we found that high CD14 + cell content poses a challenge for manufacturing CAR T cells, especially in patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and multiple myeloma caused by the non-specific phagocytosis of the magnetic beads used to activate CD3 + T cells. We demonstrated that monocyte depletion via rapid plastic surface adhesion significantly reduces the CD14 + monocyte content in the apheresis products and simultaneously boosts the CD3 + content. We established a 40% CD14 + threshold for the stratification of apheresis products across nine clinical trials and demonstrated the effectiveness of this procedure by comparing manufacturing runs in two phase 1 clinical trials. Our study suggests that CD14 + content should be monitored in apheresis products, and that the manufacturing of CAR T cells should incorporate a step that lessens the CD14 + cell content in apheresis products containing more than 40% to maximize the production success.
BACKGROUND Susceptibility testing results are not predictive of clinical response to antibiotic therapy in chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections in cystic fibrosis (CF). We assessed the impact of reducing the number of routine susceptibility tests performed on clinical outcome in these cases. METHODS In June 2006, we introduced a protocol whereby susceptibility tests of P. aeruginosa isolates obtained from respiratory samples of people with CF were limited to those taken at the commencement of antibiotic therapy, when there was evidence of clinical failure or routinely if not tested in the previous 3 months. At all other times, isolates were identified and reported as normal but P. aeruginosa isolates were not subjected to susceptibility testing. RESULTS Over a 6 month period, P. aeruginosa was isolated on at least one occasion from 193 patients attending the Adult Cystic Fibrosis Unit. In this period, we reduced the number of routine susceptibility tests by 56% (from a projected 2231 tests on 872 samples to an actual 972 tests on 427 samples). We assessed the response to courses of intravenous antibiotic treatment administered during the 6 month study period in 2006 and for courses administered in the same patients during the same calendar months in 2005. No significant differences in median change of FEV1, FVC, C-reactive protein (CRP), white cell count, weight or duration of intravenous antibiotics were observed. The projected savings of this intervention were 3500 euros in consumables and 170 h (costed at 6500 euros) of laboratory staff time per annum, a total annual saving of 10,000 euros (6500 pounds sterling). CONCLUSIONS For CF units sending regular, routine sputum samples, a reduction in the number of susceptibility tests performed in cases of chronic P. aeruginosa infection can be carried out without impacting on short-term clinical outcomes.
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