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Cytopenia after CAR-T Cell Therapy—A Brief Review of a Complex Problem

Naman Sharma, Patrick M. Reagan, Jane L. Liesveld

2022Cancers101 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-cell (CAR-T) immunotherapy has emerged as an efficacious and life extending treatment modality with high response rates and durable remissions in patients with relapsed and refractory non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), follicular lymphoma, and B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) as well as in other diseases. Prolonged or recurrent cytopenias after CAR-T therapy have increasingly been reported at varying rates, and the pathogenesis of this complication is not yet well-understood but is likely contributed to by multiple factors. Current studies reported are primarily retrospective, heterogeneous in terms of CAR-Ts used and diseases treated, non-uniform in definitions of cytopenias and durations for end points, and vary in terms of recommended management. Prospective studies and correlative laboratory studies investigating the pathophysiology of prolonged cytopenias will enhance our understanding of this phenomenon. This review summarizes knowledge of these cytopenias to date.

Topics & Concepts

CytopeniaMedicineChimeric antigen receptorLymphomaImmunotherapyFollicular lymphomaImmunologyRefractory (planetary science)OncologyPediatricsImmune systemBone marrowAstrobiologyPhysicsCAR-T cell therapy researchIntegrated Circuits and Semiconductor Failure AnalysisVirus-based gene therapy research
Cytopenia after CAR-T Cell Therapy—A Brief Review of a Complex Problem | Litcius