Engineered T cells secreting anti-BCMA T cell engagers control multiple myeloma and promote immune memory in vivo

Laura Diez-Alonso, Aida Falgas, Javier Arroyo-Rodenas, Paola A. Romencin, Alba Martinez, Marina Gomez-Rosel,Belen Blanco, Anais Jimenez-Reinoso,Andrea Mayado, Alba Perez-Pons,Oscar Aguilar-Sopena, Angel Ramirez-Fernandez,Alejandro Segura-Tudela, Lorena Perez-Amill,Antonio Tapia-Galisteo, Carmen Dominguez-Alonso, Laura Rubio-Perez, Maria Jara,Francesc Sole, Oana Hangiu, Laura Almagro, Angela Albitre, Petronila Penela,Laura Sanz, Eduardo Anguita,Antonio Valeri, Almudena Garcia-Ortiz, Paula Rio,Manel Juan, Joaquin Martinez-Lopez,Pedro Roda-Navarro, Beatriz Martin-Antonio,Alberto Orfao,Pablo Menendez, Clara Bueno,Luis alvarez-Vallina

SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE(2024)

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摘要
Multiple myeloma is the second most common hematological malignancy in adults and remains an incurable disease. B cell maturation antigen (BCMA)-directed immunotherapy, including T cells bearing chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) and systemically injected bispecific T cell engagers (TCEs), has shown remarkable clinical activity, and several products have received market approval. However, despite promising results, most patients eventually become refractory and relapse, highlighting the need for alternative strategies. Engineered T cells secreting TCE antibodies (STAb) represent a promising strategy that combines the advantages of adoptive cell therapies and bispecific antibodies. Here, we undertook a comprehensive preclinical study comparing the therapeutic potential of T cells either expressing second-generation anti-BCMA CARs (CAR-T) or secreting BCMAxCD3 TCEs (STAb-T) in a T cell-limiting experimental setting mimicking the conditions found in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma. STAb-T cells recruited T cell activity at extremely low effector-to-target ratios and were resistant to inhibition mediated by soluble BCMA released from the cell surface, resulting in enhanced cytotoxic responses and prevention of immune escape of multiple myeloma cells in vitro. These advantages led to robust expansion and persistence of STAb-T cells in vivo, generating long-lived memory BCMA-specific responses that could control multiple myeloma progression in xenograft models, outperforming traditional CAR-T cells. These promising preclinical results encourage clinical testing of the BCMA-STAb-T cell approach in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma.
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