Author
Listed:
- Simona Manni
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Francesca Del Bufalo
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Pietro Merli
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Domenico Alessandro Silvestris
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Marika Guercio
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Simona Caruso
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Sofia Reddel
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Laura Iaffaldano
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Michele Pezzella
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Stefano Di Cecca
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Matilde Sinibaldi
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Alessio Ottaviani
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Maria Cecilia Quadraccia
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Mariasole Aurigemma
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Andrea Sarcinelli
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Roselia Ciccone
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Zeinab Abbaszadeh
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Manuela Ceccarelli
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Rita De Vito
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Maria Chiara Lodi
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Maria Giuseppina Cefalo
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Angela Mastronuzzi
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Biagio De Angelis
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS)
- Franco Locatelli
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS
Catholic University of the Sacred Heart)
- Concetta Quintarelli
(Bambino Gesù Children Hospital, IRCCS
University of Naples Federico II)
Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR-T) cell therapy may achieve long-lasting remission in patients with B-cell malignancies not responding to conventional therapies. However, potentially severe and hard-to-manage side effects, including cytokine release syndrome (CRS), neurotoxicity and macrophage activation syndrome, and the lack of pathophysiological experimental models limit the applicability and development of this form of therapy. Here we present a comprehensive humanized mouse model, by which we show that IFNγ neutralization by the clinically approved monoclonal antibody, emapalumab, mitigates severe toxicity related to CAR-T cell therapy. We demonstrate that emapalumab reduces the pro-inflammatory environment in the model, thus allowing control of severe CRS and preventing brain damage, characterized by multifocal hemorrhages. Importantly, our in vitro and in vivo experiments show that IFNγ inhibition does not affect the ability of CD19-targeting CAR-T (CAR.CD19-T) cells to eradicate CD19+ lymphoma cells. Thus, our study provides evidence that anti-IFNγ treatment might reduce immune related adverse effect without compromising therapeutic success and provides rationale for an emapalumab-CAR.CD19-T cell combination therapy in humans.
Suggested Citation
Simona Manni & Francesca Del Bufalo & Pietro Merli & Domenico Alessandro Silvestris & Marika Guercio & Simona Caruso & Sofia Reddel & Laura Iaffaldano & Michele Pezzella & Stefano Di Cecca & Matilde S, 2023.
"Neutralizing IFNγ improves safety without compromising efficacy of CAR-T cell therapy in B-cell malignancies,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 14(1), pages 1-13, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:14:y:2023:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-023-38723-y
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-38723-y
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