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Showing posts with label Juno Therapeutics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Juno Therapeutics. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 February 2018

ASCO Clinical Cancer Advances 2018. And the winner is...


T cells ganging up on a tumour cell 
The American Society of Clinical Oncology’s (ASCO) annual review always makes for interesting reading. Immunotherapy continues to feature large [ASCO 2017 Annual Report again picks immunotherapy as “Advance of the Year"] , with adoptive cell immunotherapy being named “Advance of the Year”.

This bespoke treatment involves genetic manipulation of the patient’s own T-cells, in which an engineered virus is used to insert DNA encoding a protein capable of recognising unique molecules present on the surface of tumour cells. Transformed cells expressing chimeric antigen receptors (CAR) are cultured in the laboratory and then infused back into the donating patient. CAR-T cells then seek and destroy cancer cells. Being a “living therapy”, CAR-T cells continue to multiply to exert a persistent anti-tumour effect.

While the number of patients who have received CAR-T therapy to date is still in only in the hundreds and largely limited to certain haematological cancers, clinical response results certainly justify the ASCO accolade.  Kymriah® (Novartis), the first adoptive cell immunotherapy to receive FDA approval, achieved unprecedented response rates in children and young adults suffering from relapsed or refractory acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL).  Over 80% of Kymriah® treated patients went into remission within 3 months, with 75% remaining still in remission after 6 months. 

Impressive study results have been reported for another hard-to-treat blood cancer, relapsed or refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Response rates to available treatments are less 10%, with survival measured in months. Complete response rates were 40% and 30% after 1 and 6 months, respectively. Moreover, treatment raised the probability of being relapse-free at 6 months to almost 74%. Another FDA approved CAR-T therapy, Yescarta® (Kite Pharma, recently acquired by Gilead) has also shown achieved complete and durable complete responses in DLBCL and other forms of B-cell lymphoma.

The major challenge of CAR-T treatment is management of potentially life-threatening adverse effects, which are a direct consequence of the engineered anti-tumour response, with the most serious being “cytokine storms” resulting from release of potent inflammatory molecules (including IFN-γ, IL-10 and IL-6). Some degree of neurotoxicity is common in recipients, although the long-term consequences of this are unknown.

Other significant challenges are logistics and cost: as personalized living therapies, cell collection, transformation, expansion and delivery to the patient is a complex series of steps, with consistent manufacture of a safe and reliable product being the most demanding. While the list prices of Kymriah® and Yescarta® are $475,000 and $373,000, respectively (Novartis offers a rebate where patients do not respond to treatment), side effect management and other support costs can bring the total medical bill close to $1.5 million per patient. This, and complex reimbursement issues, are at least in part, factors in the low uptake of CAR-T therapy. Better definition of cost-effectiveness is needed.

Despite these challenges, a variety of investigational adoptive cell immunotherapies is in the works for cancers other than B-cell malignancies, with studies underway in multiple myeloma (Bluebird Bio, Kite Pharma); ovarian cancer (Juno Therapeutics), and glioblastoma (Mustang Bio, Aurora Biopharma). Several “next generation” candidates incorporate drug-sensitive “safety switches” that allow the anti-tumour response to be turned on or off.

Moving from bespoke to “off the peg” therapy using cells collected from healthy donors (“allogeneic” cell therapy) could substantially reduce the overall cost of cellular immunotherapy. Early clinical studies with an allogeneic CAR-T cell product developed by Cellectis are underway.

Cellular immunotherapy development has proved to be a rocky road. Clinical study deaths have resulted in the abandonment of a CAR-T candidate by Juno Therapeutics [CAR-T: A wheel falls off, but still rolling], and clinical trial holds imposed on Cellectis (although recently lifted) and as of this week, Bellicum Therapeutics, with three unexpected deaths occurring in subjects under treatment for haematological cancers. Growing experience may allow early identification of study subjects at increased risk of severe adverse events or development of safer investigational treatment regimens.

Commercial success could prove elusive for several developers with high product cost, small addressable patient populations, safety issues, and competition from both cellular and non-cellular immunotherapies, particularly in the B-cell malignancy segment, constraining uptake. Giants such as Novartis can afford the necessary infrastructure, flexible pricing and slow rate of uptake, but smaller players may join Kite Pharma and Juno Therapeutics in being acquired by companies with deep pockets.  

Photo credit: NCI/NIH, Alex Ritter, Jennifer Lippincott Schwartz, and Gillian Griffiths

Thursday, 2 March 2017

CAR-T: A wheel falls off, but still rolling

In the same week that Kite Pharma announced positive data from a pivotal study of its lead CAR-T candidate, KTE-C19 (easier to remember- and to spell- than the non-proprietary designation axicabtagene ciloleucel) in patients with B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) refractory to other treatments, a one-time leader in the CAR-T race, Juno Therapeutics, pulled the plug on its lead candidate, JCAR015.

CAR-T (chimeric antigen receptor – the “T” is for T cell) is a form of adoptive cell transfer therapy which involves collection of T-cells from the patient and genetically engineering them to express receptors specific for a protein expressed on the tumour surface. After expansion in the laboratory, the transformed cells are infused back into the patient to seek and destroy tumour cells.

CAR-T therapy first made headlines by achieving unprecedented remission rates in patients with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) and NHL where all available treatments had failed to slow disease progression. The other side of the coin was the accompanying high incidence of life-threatening adverse events arising from the massive release of cytokines (part and parcel of the anti-tumour response) and from immune-related neurotoxicity.

Juno’s JCAR015 was placed on clinical hold early in development following a death attributed to cytokine release syndrome and again twice in 2016 following five deaths from cerebral oedema during a Phase II study in ALL patients.  The company initially speculated that the deaths might be related to changes in a pre-treatment regimen involving two chemotherapy drugs but the decision to halt further development suggests that JCAR015 itself is now thought be the culprit. 

CAR-T candidates from Kite Pharma and Novartis have also resulted in high rates of cytokine release and neurotoxicity-related adverse events, but, so far, these have proved to be more manageable or of lesser severity than those occurring during the JCAR015 studies. No cerebral oedema occurred in the Kite Pharma pivotal study, with two treatment-related deaths probably arising from cytokine release.

Juno hope to stay in the game with an earlier stage CAR-T candidate, JCAR017, which showed a relatively low incidence of severe adverse events  in a small study conducted in NHL patients, but the abandonment of JCAR015 puts Juno a long way behind Kite Pharma and Novartis, with both shooting for regulatory approval in 2017.

CAR-T treatment will probably never be a “safe” option, although adverse event management would be expected to improve with experience. If regulators can be convinced that the benefits of CAR-T therapy outweigh risk, safety is likely to be a secondary concern for individuals cursed with otherwise untreatable B-cell malignancies. 

An arguably bigger challenge facing Kite Pharma, Novartis and other CAR-T contenders is whether individualised adoptive cell transfer therapies can be reliably scaled up and delivered at a cost that healthcare systems are able and willing to meet.



Kite Announces Positive Topline Primary Results of Axicabtagene Ciloleucel from First Pivotal CAR-T Trial in Patients with Aggressive Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma. Company press release online 28th February 2017. http://tinyurl.com/js7293j


Juno Therapeutics Reports Fourth Quarter and 2016 Financial Results. Company press release online 1st March 2017. http://tinyurl.com/hunp9uh