Status
Conditions
About
The "CAR-T" immunotherapy ("Chimeric Antigen Receptor T cell therapies") is a therapy based on T cells expressing a chemical receptor for a specific antigen indicated for patients with some types of oncohematological pathologies that have not responded to other forms treatment, such as: relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, including diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, primary B-cell mediastinal lymphoma, transformed follicular lymphoma, mantle cell lymphoma, acute lymphoblastic leukemia, in children and young adults (<26 years) and multiple myeloma. This therapy is an absolutely innovative approach which consists of a personalized live cell immunotherapy that modifies the immune system of the recipient patient to make it able to recognize and eradicate the neoplastic cells expressing the antigen towards which the cells have been engineered.
This approach has several biological advantages:
Full description
The "CAR-T" immunotherapy ("Chimeric Antigen Receptor T cell therapies") is a therapy based on T cells expressing a chemical receptor for a specific antigen indicated for patients with some types of oncohematological pathologies that have not responded to other forms treatment, such as: relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, including diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, primary B-cell mediastinal lymphoma, transformed follicular lymphoma, mantle cell lymphoma, acute lymphoblastic leukemia, in children and young adults (<26 years) and multiple myeloma. This therapy is an absolutely innovative approach which consists of a personalized live cell immunotherapy that modifies the recipient patient's immune system to make it able to recognize and eradicate the neoplastic cells expressing the antigen towards which the cells have been engineered. CAR-T therapy uses specific immune cells (T lymphocytes) of the patient, isolated from his peripheral blood, engineered through the integration of genetic material encoding the chimeric receptor, expanded in vitro and then re-infused to activate the immune system response against the disease.
This approach has several biological advantages:
The therapeutic indications for which they have been approved are:
Although they represent an effective last therapeutic option in patients with advanced disease and resistant to traditional chemotherapy lines, the use of CAR-T therapies is not without serious complications, quite the contrary. In particular, there are:
Understanding of the determinants of the massive inflammatory response underlying the toxicity of CAR-T therapy remains largely unclear. It is a shared opinion in the medical-scientific community that what is defined as the "target effect" of CAR cells on target tumor cells, and the consequent immune response, is one of the factors triggering a massive pro-inflammatory cytokine reaction, but the mechanisms that are the basis and that they can predict and personalize the treatment, or even prevent it, are not yet defined. It is hypothesized, and several studies are beginning to be available in this regard, that the composition and ratios of leukocyte populations (CD4 and CD8 among others) used for the production of CAR T may influence the clinical outcome in the patient. In particular, the proliferation and persistence of CAR cells in the patient are key factors in determining the effectiveness of the therapy itself. Hence the need to characterize the various cell subsets both in the CD3 + CAR + population and in the CD3 + CAR- population in the patient's clinical course. It is also fundamental to study the epigenetic status of the lymphocyte populations themselves, as well as the biological age of the patient connected to it. It is in fact an element that is believed to play a fundamental role in the clinical response. In fact, the assessment of the biological age of a subject is an index composed of molecular markers (such as the epigenetic status of nucleated cells), strongly correlated with the chronological age, but capable of expressing the speed of aging of the single individual, as well as of the cells of his immune system, and consequently capable of highlighting with greater emphasis than the chronological age the health risks associated with the therapy and his inflammatory state. A further element to consider in the overall picture we are considering is the role that microRNAs (miRNAs) play as crucial regulators of T-cell survival, differentiation and function, all of which are key factors influencing the outcome of immunotherapy. adoptive based on CAR cells. MicroRNAs are short strands of RNA with a regulatory function of cellular gene expression, especially in the modulation of inflammation. For this reason, the study of them in the context we are considering is of primary importance.
Given these premises, the primary objectives of the study are the following:
Peripheral blood samples will be used to carry out the study and will be taken at the following times:
The sampling of tissues coincides with the sampling that represent the current standard in routine clinical practice in the transplanted patient; therefore the samples will be obtained taking care not to invalidate the normal diagnostic-assistance procedures. The results of this study will have a clinical-care impact of primary importance aimed at managing the complications of CAR-T therapy and at understanding the biological mechanisms underlying them.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Patients aged ≥ 18 years. Patients with haematological pathology admitted to be subjected to CAR-T Therapy at the Advanced Cell Therapy Program, IRCCS University Hospital of Bologna.
Patients who consent to participate in this study after signing informed consent.
Exclusion criteria
Loading...
Central trial contact
Franscesca Bonifazi, MD; Enrica Tomassini, DM
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal