Development of CAR-T cell therapy for B-ALL using a point-of-care approach
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Oncoimmunology
Abstract
Recently approved by the FDA and European Medicines Agency, CAR-T cell therapy is a new treatment
option for B-cell malignancies. Currently, CAR-T cells are manufactured in centralized facilities and face
bottlenecks like complex scaling up, high costs, and logistic operations. These difficulties are mainly
related to the use of viral vectors and the requirement to expand CAR-T cells to reach the therapeutic
dose. In this paper, by using Sleeping Beauty-mediated genetic modification delivered by electropora-
tion, we show that CAR-T cells can be generated and used without the need for ex vivo activation and
expansion, consistent with a point-of-care (POC) approach. Our results show that minimally manipulated
CAR-T cells are effective in vivo against RS4;11 leukemia cells engrafted in NSG mice even when
inoculated after only 4 h of gene transfer. In an effort to better characterize the infused CAR-T cells,
we show that 19BBz T lymphocytes infused after 24 h of electroporation (where CAR expression is
already detectable) can improve the overall survival and reduce tumor burden in organs of mice
engrafted with RS4;11 or Nalm-6 B cell leukemia. A side-by-side comparison of POC approach with
a conventional 8-day expansion protocol using Transact beads demonstrated that both approaches
have equivalent antitumor activity in vivo. Our data suggest that POC approach is a viable alternative for
the generation and use of CAR-T cells, overcoming the limitations of current manufacturing protocols. Its
use has the potential to expand CAR immunotherapy to a higher number of patients, especially in the
context of low-income countries.