Litcius/Paper detail

Incidence of CD19-negative relapse after CD19-targeted immunotherapy in R/R BCP acute lymphoblastic leukemia: a review

Franco Locatelli, Bijal Shah, Tracy Thomas, Kelly Velasco, Babatunde Adedokun, Ibrahim Aldoss, Lia Gore, Dieter Hoelzer, Renato Bassan, Jae H. Park, Nicolas Boissel, Hagop M. Kantarjian

2023Leukemia & lymphoma/Leukemia and lymphoma24 citationsDOI

Abstract

There are inconsistencies in the reporting of CD19 antigen status following treatment with CD19-targeted therapies. A majority of evidence comes from studies reporting small sample sizes. In this review, we systematically summarize published studies that have reported rates of CD19-negative relapse after treatment with either blinatumomab or CD19-directed CAR T-cell therapy and report the rates of CD19-negative relapse when evaluated in a standardized way across trials. CD19-negative relapse appears to occur more commonly in relapses following CAR T-cell therapy compared with blinatumomab, whether proportions are calculated among all treated patients (8.7% vs 4.5%) or among patients who relapse (30% vs 22.5%). The median (range) duration of follow-up was 29.3 (17.4-50.8) and 20.4 (6.9-49.0) months for publications on blinatumomab (n = 10) and CAR T-cell therapies (n = 23), respectively. There is a need for standardized reporting of CD19 antigen status in the setting of relapse following novel immunotherapies to inform clinical practice.

Topics & Concepts

BlinatumomabMedicineCD19OncologyInternal medicineImmunotherapyClinical trialImmunologyAntigenCancerCAR-T cell therapy researchVirus-based gene therapy researchSilicon Carbide Semiconductor Technologies