Researchers at Texas Children’s Cancer Center and the Center for Cell and Gene Therapy at Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children’s Hospital and Houston Methodist published results of a phase I clinical trial of a novel immunotherapy for high-risk sarcomas in the journal Nature Cancer.
The therapy uses chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells engineered to target the HER2 protein, which is overexpressed on the surface of sarcoma cells. The HEROS 2.0 trial showed that this therapeutic approach is safe and is associated with clinical benefit. “CAR T cell therapy has been a highly successful strategy for recurrent or high-risk leukemias or lymphomas, but challenges remain in using this therapy for solid tumors,” said first and corresponding author Dr. Meenakshi Hegde, associate professor of pediatrics — hematology and oncology at Baylor and pediatric oncologist at Texas Children’s Cancer Center. “The results of this trial show that we are moving the dial in harnessing the power of CAR T cells as an effective anticancer therapy for sarcomas.”
In a previous clinical trial, the HEROS study, researchers found that CAR T cells directed at HER2+ tumor cells had a favorable safety profile, but clinical benefit was limited by poor CAR T expansion and persistence. In HEROS 2.0, researchers added successive HER2-CAR T cell infusions following lymphodepletion, which uses chemotherapy to deplete the patient’s own T cells, to make room for the infused therapeutic HER2-CAR T cells to expand.
“We also increased the number of allowable HER2-CAR T infusions to sustain the exposure time of CAR T cells, with the goal of increasing the antitumor effect,” Hegde said. “This study showed that CAR T expansion and persistence was improved with lymphodepletion and repeat cycles of treatment.”
Thirteen patients were enrolled in the HEROS 2.0 trial at Texas Children’s Cancer Center and Houston Methodist Hospital, and seven patients received multiple CAR T infusions. HER2-CAR T expansion occurred following 19 of 21 total infusions, and clinical benefit was seen in 50% of treated patients. An exceptional response in a patient with metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma was detailed in a publication in Nature Communications in 2020. The patient remains healthy and cancer free, more than five years after treatment. Nine patients in the first two cohorts developed low-grade cytokine release syndrome (CRS), an acute inflammatory response seen as a side effect of CAR T treatment. Two patients in the third cohort experienced dose-limiting CRS, which necessitated ending the dose-escalation.
“We are now studying the tumors and the way we engineer the CAR T cells to better facilitate the safe delivery of higher doses, thereby enhancing antitumor activity by increasing the magnitude of CAR T cell expansion and persistence,” Hegde said. “HEROS 2.0, the second edition of the HEROS trials, exemplifies how the crosstalk between the bench and the bedside results in refinement of first-in-child studies and more durable clinical benefit,” said senior author Dr. Nabil Ahmed, professor of pediatrics — hematology and oncology at Baylor and pediatric oncologist at Texas Children’s Cancer Center.
The researchers currently are recruiting for the HEROS 3.0 trial, which will evaluate the safety of giving HER2-CAR T cells in combination with chemotherapy and an immune checkpoint inhibitor drug.