Abstract
BACKGROUND
In patients with autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA), the risk of relapse is high owing to persistent autoreactive B-cell activity. Multirefractory AIHA is a more advanced stage of disease that is defined by a lack of response to at least three lines of therapy. CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy results in profound B-cell depletion and may be a useful approach to achieving drug-free remission in multirefractory AIHA.METHODS
We enrolled patients from a compassionate-use program and those from a phase 1 study who had primary multirefractory AIHA. Each patient received a single infusion of autologous CD19 CAR T cells. The primary objective was to assess the safety profile — the incidence, characteristics, and severity of adverse events, including cytokine-release syndrome and immune effector cell–associated neurotoxicity syndrome. Secondary objectives included efficacy and pharmacokinetic features. A complete response was defined by resolution of symptoms, an increased hemoglobin level, and normalization of hemolysis markers. B-cell reconstitution and the origin of relapse were analyzed with flow cytometry, single-cell RNA sequencing, and paired B-cell receptor sequencing.RESULTS
CD19 CAR T cells were administered to 11 patients — 5 in the compassionate-use program and 6 in the phase 1 study. The median follow-up was 12.2 months (range, 7.3 to 21.9). All patients had a complete response; the median time to a complete response was 45 days (range, 21 to 153). The median duration of drug-free remission was 11.5 months (range, 6.8 to 21.0). Cytokine-release syndrome of grade 1 or 2 in severity occurred in 9 patients, and immune effector cell–associated neurotoxicity syndrome of grade 1 occurred in 1 patient. A total of 15 infections occurred among 7 patients, with no infections of grade 4 or higher. One patient had immune effector cell–associated hematotoxicity of grade 3. In multi-omics assessments of sequential samples, naive B cells were predominant in the reconstituted B-cell population in patients with drug-free remission, and crosstalk between HLA-DRB5+ B cells, CD4+ T cells, and B-cell maturation antigen–expressing long-lived plasma cells contributed to a relapse-specific B-cell niche.CONCLUSIONS
CD19 CAR T-cell therapy had expected toxic effects and resulted in sustained remission in patients with multirefractory AIHA. (Funded by the National Key Research and Development Program of China and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT06231368.)100% Chinese paper