Rare manufacturing glitch raises concern over CAR-T therapies: study

Reuters  |  CHICAGO 

By Steenhuysen

The mishap occurred in a 20-year-old patient treated with cells manufactured at the university, eventually causing a fatal relapse of the blood cancer, researchers reported in the journal

The patient was entered in an early-stage trial of CTL019, a treatment eventually licensed to and sold under the brand name Kymriah, which became the first such to win U.S. approval in 2017.

Dr. of the at the University of Pennsylvania, who led the study, said the case was "exceptionally rare," noting that it is the only one out of hundreds of patients treated at Penn.

He said the findings were disclosed to the and discussed in detail prior to the treatment's approval.

CAR-T therapies, shorthand for chimeric antigen receptor T-cell, are part of a hot new approach to fighting in which doctors remove infection-fighting immune cells known as T-cells, genetically them to recognize and attack cancer, and infuse them back into the patient.

The personalized one-time treatment is complex and expensive, but offers hope for people with who have exhausted all other treatment options.

is approved in and the to treat gravely ill children with acute lymphoblastic (ALL), as well as adults with (DLBCL).

Gilead Sciences' CAR-T therapy Yescarta also won U.S. and European approvals last year to treat DLBCL. Many more CAR-Ts are in clinical trials, including a treatment being developed by Bio along with

In the Penn study, researchers found that a cell got processed along with the immune cells and infused back into the patient. In that process, the leukemia cell acquired the ability to hide from fighting CAR-T cells.

The patient was in his third relapse after earlier receiving and a cord blood transplant. Initially, he responded to the CAR-T treatment, but the cell grew unchecked, eventually causing the patient to relapse again.

The authors said the study illustrates the need for better "that can purge residual contaminating cells from engineered T cells."

stressed that the company has a different than that used by Penn, and that its process includes steps to eliminate leukemic cells from the product.

"We are not aware of any cases of this happening in the more than 400 patients treated with CTL019/manufactured by for clinical trials or the commercial setting," the Swiss drugmaker said in a statement.

(Reporting by Steenhuysen; additional reporting by in Zurich; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, October 01 2018. 21:23 IST