Cancer: Ten-year remission of leukaemia associated with CAR T cell therapy
Nature
February 3, 2022
Decade-long remissions of leukaemia in two patients sustained by the persistence of modified immune cells (named CAR T cells) designed to trigger an immune response against cancer cells, are documented in Nature this week. These cases represent long-lasting CAR T cell responses, and provide insights into how long the treatment effects may last.
CAR T cell therapy is a type of immunotherapy that involves collecting and using the patient’s own immune cells to treat their condition. T cells are collected and modified to recognize and attack cancer cells, and the resulting CAR T cells are given back to the patient as a blood infusion. The long-term effects of this treatment have not been extensively studied.
J. Joseph Melenhorst and colleagues describe outcomes in two patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia who were enrolled on a phase I trial of CAR T therapy in 2010. Both patients achieved complete remission in that year and the CAR T cells remained detectable for more than 10 years of follow-up. The authors observe an evolution of the CAR T cells over time, with a highly activated population emerging and becoming dominant in both patients. These cells continued to demonstrate tumour-cell-killing characteristics and ongoing proliferation. These findings help us to understand the CAR T cell characteristics associated with anti-cancer response and long-term remission in leukaemia, the authors conclude.
doi: 10.1038/s41586-021-04390-6
Research highlights
-
Jul 1
Evolution: Pandas gave bamboo the thumbs up at least six million years agoScientific Reports
-
Jul 1
Space health: The path of most resistance could help limit bone loss during spaceflightScientific Reports
-
Jul 1
Criminology: Predicting police enforcement bias in major US citiesNature Human Behaviour
-
Jun 30
Genomics: Gray wolf genome hints at dual ancestry of dogsNature
-
Jun 30
Evolution: Hawks learn on the fly to swoop up before perchingNature
-
Jun 30
Microbiology: Transmission of gastrointestinal viruses in salivaNature