A stem cell epigenome is associated with primary nonresponse to CD19 CAR T cells in pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia
•Multiomic investigation of pretreatment bone marrow identifies a primary nonresponder signature to CD19-CAR in childhood B-ALL.•Primary nonresponders harbor myeloid and stem cell–like features while maintaining a pre–B-cell phenotype. [Display omitted] CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Blood advances 2023-08, Vol.7 (15), p.4218-4232 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Multiomic investigation of pretreatment bone marrow identifies a primary nonresponder signature to CD19-CAR in childhood B-ALL.•Primary nonresponders harbor myeloid and stem cell–like features while maintaining a pre–B-cell phenotype.
[Display omitted]
CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy (CD19-CAR) has changed the treatment landscape and outcomes for patients with pre–B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). Unfortunately, primary nonresponse (PNR), sustained CD19+ disease, and concurrent expansion of CD19-CAR occur in 20% of the patients and is associated with adverse outcomes. Although some failures may be attributable to CD19 loss, mechanisms of CD19-independent, leukemia-intrinsic resistance to CD19-CAR remain poorly understood. We hypothesize that PNR leukemias are distinct compared with primary sensitive (PS) leukemias and that these differences are present before treatment. We used a multiomic approach to investigate this in 14 patients (7 with PNR and 7 with PS) enrolled in the PLAT-02 trial at Seattle Children’s Hospital. Long-read PacBio sequencing helped identify 1 PNR in which 47% of CD19 transcripts had exon 2 skipping, but other samples lacked CD19 transcript abnormalities. Epigenetic profiling discovered DNA hypermethylation at genes targeted by polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) in embryonic stem cells. Similarly, assays of transposase-accessible chromatin–sequencing revealed reduced accessibility at these PRC2 target genes, with a gain in accessibility of regions characteristic of hematopoietic stem cells and multilineage progenitors in PNR. Single-cell RNA sequencing and cytometry by time of flight analyses identified leukemic subpopulations expressing multilineage markers and decreased antigen presentation in PNR. We thus describe the association of a stem cell epigenome with primary resistance to CD19-CAR therapy. Future trials incorporating these biomarkers, with the addition of multispecific CAR T cells targeting against leukemic stem cell or myeloid antigens, and/or combined epigenetic therapy to disrupt this distinct stem cell epigenome may improve outcomes of patients with B-ALL. |
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ISSN: | 2473-9529 2473-9537 2473-9537 |
DOI: | 10.1182/bloodadvances.2022008977 |