Follicular Lymphoma (FL) is the second most common type of non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (NHL) in the United States, accounting for approximately 20% of NHL cases. FL is considered incurable with conventional therapies, and novel therapies are therefore urgently needed. Long-term remissions using allogeneic stem cell transplantation and donor lymphocyte infusion suggest curability using cellular therapy, but these approaches are limited by significant toxicity. We have initiated a pilot Phase I clinical trial testing the feasibility, safety, and toxicity of treating patients with relapsed FL with autologous T lymphocytes that have been genetically modified to express a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) recognizing the CD20 antigen present on B cell lymphomas. Nine patients have been registered to the protocol to date. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were obtained from patients by apheresis, activated with anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody (OKT3) and interleukin-2 (IL-2) and transfected by electroporation with a plasmid encoding a CD20-specific scFvFc:ζ CAR as well as a neomycin-resistance selection gene. Transfectants were selected using G418 and expanded ex vivo. For the first 5 patients, cytotoxic CD8+ T cells were cloned by limiting dilution, but this process proved to be laborious and inefficient. Two patients’ clones failed to expand adequately and are off-study, and 2 additional patients received cell doses below the target level. Therefore, subsequent patients underwent oligoclonal expansion of T cells in bulk culture. T cells expressing the CAR and manifesting CD20-specific cytotoxicity were identified by flow cytometry and standard chromium release assays. Patients underwent three infusions of modified T cells at escalating doses (108, 109 and 3.3 × 109 cells/m2) over a period of 7–10 days. The 4 patients who received oligoclonal T cells also received 14 days of low-dose subcutaneous IL-2 injections (500,000 U/m2 twice daily) to prolong in vivo persistence. Seven patients underwent a total of 20 T cell infusions, and no significant toxicities attributable to the T cell infusions were observed. Cellular and immune response assays have not detected any immune responses to the genetically modified T cells in any of the treated patients, although the seventh patient has not yet been evaluated for immune responses. T cells expressing the CAR were detectable in the peripheral blood of patients by PCR for ∼14 days after infusions in the first three patients who received T cell clones, and 4–8 weeks in patients receiving oligoclonal T cells and IL-2 injections. One patient was maintained in complete remission for over a year after T cell infusions, and a second patient achieved a partial remission lasting three months. A third patient had a partial PET response. The remaining 3 patients maintained stable disease for 3–12 months. These results suggest that adoptive cellular therapy with genetically modified CD20-specific T cells is a safe and feasible approach to treating FL that warrants further investigation.

(Supported by NIH Grant R21 CA117131, the Lymphoma Research Foundation, and the Clinical Research Center at the University of Washington through NIH Grant M01-RR-00037).

Author notes

Disclosure: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

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