Chicago Sun-Times

What’s new in CAR T-cell therapy?

- BY JAMIE BARTOSCH UCHICAGO MEDICINE STAFF WRITER

Since commercial approval two years ago to treat some blood cancers, CAR T-cell therapy continues to show so much promise that University of Chicago Medicine researcher­s have expanded their studies to see how else the breakthrou­gh treatment can be used to fight other forms of the disease.

In 2017, the Food and Drug Administra­tion approved the use of CAR T-cell therapy for adults with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and for children and young adults with acute lymphoblas­tic leukemia (ALL). UChicago Medicine became the first site in Chicago and Illinois to be certified to offer both treatments, which involve a revolution­ary process that uses a patient’s own geneticall­y re-engineered T cells to find and destroy cancer cells. As of September 2019, the academic health system has treated 100 patients with CAR-T.

UChicago Medicine — which offers the most CAR-T trials in the Midwest — is now conducting 15 studies for the blood diseases multiple myeloma, ALL, mantel cell lymphoma, follicular lymphoma and chronic lymphocyti­c leukemia. Trials for solid tumors like lung, cervical and head and neck cancers are in the early stages.

“These trials are not widely available, and some of them are the first worldwide,” said Michael Bishop, MD, director of UChicago Medicine’s Hematopoie­tic Cellular Therapy Program. “They’re only being done at select institutio­ns, and we have been asked to do many of them.”

Bishop and his team have seen encouragin­g results.

“We’re seeing responses greater than 90% in adult lymphoblas­tic leukemia, and the multiple myeloma success rate is greater than 50% and even higher in some studies,” he said.

In large B-cell lymphoma, the success rate is 30% to 40% for long-term complete remissions. “We’re seeing great successes, but we’ve got to improve,” he added. “We’re now trying to understand why certain people respond and why others don’t.”

While CAR T-cell therapy has been a transforma­tional innovation in cancer treatment, its success in treating all cancers has been limited. For example, the therapy has not been very effective on soft tumors such as ovarian cancer, which are difficult for the reprogramm­ed T cells to find, Bishop said.

In areas CAR-T has shown promise, progress has

been moving quickly. UChicago Medicine is poised to become the first hospital in the country to offer ready-made “off-the-shelf” CAR-T cells to patients. This past summer, UChicago Medicine opened its Advanced Cellular Therapeuti­cs Facility, a 10,000-square-foot state-of-the-art laboratory that can process and manufactur­e cells for therapeuti­c purposes, including CAR T-cell therapy.

Soon, rather than having a patient’s own blood cells removed and sent to a lab for genetic engineerin­g, which can take weeks, in-stock CARinfused T cells will come from a young, healthy donor. This would speed up delivery of the “living drug” to UChicago Medicine patients.

“We are offering truly leading-edge therapies that nobody else is offering,” Bishop said. “We hope we are going to improve patients’ lives and outcomes.”

 ??  ?? Michael Bishop, MD, and the team at UChicago Medicine are working toward offering ready-made CAR T-cell therapy to patients, with the help of a new Advanced Cellular Therapeuti­cs Facility.
Michael Bishop, MD, and the team at UChicago Medicine are working toward offering ready-made CAR T-cell therapy to patients, with the help of a new Advanced Cellular Therapeuti­cs Facility.

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