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A retrospectively registered pilot randomized controlled trial of postbiotic administration during antibiotic treatment increases microbiome diversity and enriches health-associated taxa

Schluter, Jonas; Jogia, William; Matheis, Fanny; Ebina, Wataru; Sullivan, Alexis P; Gordon, Kelly; Cruz, Elbert Fanega de la; Victory-Hays, Mary E; Heinly, Mary Joan; Diefenbach, Catherine S; Kang, Un Jung; Peled, Jonathan U; Foster, Kevin R; Levitt, Aubrey; McLaughlin, Eric
Antibiotic-induced microbiome injury, defined as a reduction of ecological diversity and obligate anaerobe taxa, is associated with negative health outcomes in hospitalized patients, and healthy individuals who received antibiotics in the past are at higher risk for autoimmune diseases. Postbiotics contain mixtures of bacterial fermentation metabolites and bacterial cell wall components that have the potential to modulate microbial communities. Yet, it is unknown if a fermentation-derived postbiotic can reduce antibiotic-induced microbiome injury. Here, we present the results from a single-center, randomized placebo-controlled trial involving 32 patients who received an oral, fermentation-derived postbiotic alongside oral antibiotic and probiotic therapy for non-gastrointestinal (GI) infections. At the end of the antibiotic course, patients receiving the postbiotic (n = 16) had significantly higher fecal bacterial alpha diversity (+40%, inverse Simpson index) compared to the placebo group (n = 16), and the treatment was well-tolerated. Analysis of 157 longitudinal fecal samples revealed that this increased diversity was driven by enrichment of health-associated taxa, notably obligate anaerobic Firmicutes, particularly Lachnospiraceae. In contrast, Escherichia/Shigella species, often linked to pathogenicity and antibiotic resistance, were reduced in postbiotic-treated patients at the end of antibiotic treatment and remained lower up to 10 days later. Our findings suggest that postbiotic co-administration during antibiotic therapy may augment health-associated gut microbiome composition and mitigate antibiotic-induced microbiome injury.Trial registration ISRCTN30327931 retrospectively registered.
PMID: 41312988
ISSN: 1098-5522
CID: 5968802

NKTR-255 Enhances Complete Response Following CD19 CAR-T in Patients with Relapsed/Refractory Large B-cell Lymphoma

Ahmed, Sairah; DiPersio, John F; Essell, James H; Diefenbach, Catherine; Perales, Miguel-Angel; Castilla-Llorente, Cristina; Dahiya, Saurabh; Liu, Yi; Xu, Heng; Fanton, Christie; Chaudhry, Sohail; Lee, Zachary; Marcondes, A Mario Q; Tagliaferri, Mary; Zalevsky, Jonathan; Miklos, David B; Turtle, Cameron J; McGuirk, Joseph P
Autologous T-cells engineered to express CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) have shown high overall response rates in treatment-refractory large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL). However, more than half of patients do not attain a durable response and will eventually relapse. Thus, strategies to improve long-term efficacy of CAR T-cell products are needed. In this phase 2, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter study of NKTR-255 versus placebo following CD19 CAR T-cell therapy, eligible patients with R/R LBCL were treated with one of two FDA-approved CAR T-cell products, axicabtagene ciloleucel (axi-cel) or lisocabtagene maraleucel (liso-cel). In total, 15 patients received CD19 CAR T-cell therapy and received study treatment, 11 patients were randomized to the NKTR-255 group (5 at 1.5 µg/kg; 3 at 3.0 µg/kg; 3 at 3 µg/kg then 6 µg/kg cycle 2+) and 4 to placebo. NKTR-255 post CD19 CAR T-cell administration led to augmented CR rates with 8 of 11 (73%) in the NKTR-255 group versus 2 of 4 (50%) in the placebo group reaching complete response rate at month 6 (CR6). Clinical response was accompanied by re-expansion of CD8+ CAR T-cells. The most common (≥20%) grade ≥3 NKTR-255-related adverse events were decreased neutrophil, platelet, and lymphocyte counts; all resolved without clinical sequelae. No cytokine-release-syndrome (CRS) or immune-effector-cell-associated-neurotoxicity-syndrome (ICANS) were reported in the NKTR-255 group. NKTR-255 was well-tolerated, safe, and augmented CR6 for LBCL patients. Based on the findings, additional confirmatory studies with NKTR-255 as adjuvant treatment to CAR T-cell, including other cellular therapies, are warranted (ClinicalTrials.gov number NCT05664217).
PMID: 40779552
ISSN: 2473-9537
CID: 5905472

Induced pluripotent stem-cell-derived CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor natural killer cells in B-cell lymphoma: a phase 1, first-in-human trial

Ghobadi, Armin; Bachanova, Veronika; Patel, Krish; Park, Jae H; Flinn, Ian; Riedell, Peter A; Bachier, Carlos; Diefenbach, Catherine S; Wong, Carol; Bickers, Cara; Wong, Lilly; Patel, Deepa; Goodridge, Jode; Denholt, Matthew; Valamehr, Bahram; Elstrom, Rebecca L; Strati, Paolo
BACKGROUND:FT596 is an induced pluripotent stem-cell (iPSC)-derived chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) natural killer (NK) cell therapy with three antitumour modalities: a CD19 CAR; a high-affinity, non-cleavable CD16 Fc receptor; and interleukin-15-interleukin-15 receptor fusion. In this study, we aimed to determine the recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D) and evaluate the safety and tolerability of FT596 as monotherapy and in combination with rituximab. We also aimed to evaluate the antitumour activity and characterise the pharmacokinetics of FT596 as monotherapy and in combination with rituximab. METHODS:) intravenously on day -4. Supportive care was determined by the treating investigator. Patients were observed for dose-limiting adverse events for 28 days. Patients who tolerated therapy and derived clinical benefit could receive subsequent cycles of study treatment, with modification of conditioning chemotherapy dose if clinically indicated. The dose-expansion phase evaluated additional patients at selected doses and dosing schedules that had been found to be tolerable. The primary endpoints of the study were the incidence and nature of dose-limiting toxicities within each dose-escalation cohort to determine the maximum tolerated dose or maximum assessed dose to establish the RP2D and the incidence, nature, and severity of adverse events, with severity determined according to National Cancer Institute Common Toxicity Criteria and Adverse Events version 5·0. The trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04245722. FINDINGS/RESULTS:Between March 19, 2020, and Jan 12, 2023, 86 patients with B-cell lymphoma received FT596 on regimen A (n=18) or regimen B (n=68). 22 (26%) of 86 patients were female and 72 (84%) of 86 patients were White. Patients had received a median of four previous lines of therapy (range 1-11) and 33 (38%) of 86 patients had received previous CAR T-cell therapy. The maximum tolerated dose was not reached. Cytokine release syndrome was reported in one (6%) of 18 patients (maximum grade 1) on regimen A and nine (13%) of 68 patients on regimen B (six with maximum grade 1 and three with grade 2). Neurotoxicity was not observed. INTERPRETATION/CONCLUSIONS:cells for three doses per cycle. This study supports that cell therapy using iPSC-derived, gene-modified NK cells is a potent platform for cancer treatment and suggests that such a platform might address limitations of currently available immune cell therapies, including manufacturing time, heterogeneity, access, and cost. FUNDING/BACKGROUND:Fate Therapeutics.
PMID: 39798981
ISSN: 1474-547x
CID: 5775452

Exceptional Response to Fixed Duration Obinutuzumab and Venetoclax in a Patient with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia: A Case Report [Case Report]

Rosenberg, Maya; Diefenbach, Catherine
INTRODUCTION/UNASSIGNED:Obinutuzumab is a standard treatment for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) in combination with venetoclax, following the CLL-14 trial. The purpose of the gradual ramp-up dosing is to mitigate toxicity and prevent tumor lysis; while these ramp-up doses are considered active, they are not considered to be definitive therapy. We describe the case of a CLL patient who had an exceptional response to obinutuzumab in the ramp-up phase followed by limited venetoclax. CASE REPORT/UNASSIGNED:A 73-year-old female with CLL, with trisomy 12 (70.5%), deletion of 13q (14%), and 3 copies of 11, who had been monitored for 10 years, developed bulky disease, and treatment was initiated following CLL-14. On cycle 1 day 1 (C1D1), she was treated with 100 mg of obinutuzumab; she received 900 mg on C1D2. When she returned for treatment on C1D8, she was found to have profound pancytopenia, and obinutuzumab was held. She received no further obinutuzumab but was started on venetoclax and received 12 weeks of treatment, with maximum dose reached in ramp-up being 400 mg daily. Further treatment was limited by cytopenias. Bone marrow biopsy within 4 months of treatment with a total of 1,000 mg of obinutuzumab and ∼13,000 mg venetoclax revealed trilineage hematopoiesis with only trace evidence of CLL at 0.14%. She was then treated with 4 weeks of rituximab for presumed immune thrombocytopenic purpura, and subsequent peripheral blood flow cytometry analysis revealed no evidence of CLL. The patient remains in complete remission 34 months following obinutuzumab therapy. CONCLUSION/UNASSIGNED:The degree of pancytopenia and the exceptional clinical response to minimal dose of obinutuzumab by this patient suggests an unusual sensitivity to obinutuzumab.
PMCID:12659667
PMID: 41323046
ISSN: 1662-6575
CID: 5974622

terraFlow, a high-parameter analysis tool, reveals T cell exhaustion and dysfunctional cytokine production in classical Hodgkin's lymphoma

Freeman, Daniel; Diefenbach, Catherine; Lam, Linda; Le, Tri; Alexandre, Jason; Raphael, Bruce; Grossbard, Michael; Kaminetzky, David; Ruan, Jia; Chattopadhyay, Pratip K
Immune cells express an incredible variety of proteins; by measuring combinations of these, cell types influencing disease can be precisely identified. We developed terraFlow, a platform that defines cell subsets exhaustively by combinatorial protein expression. Using high-parameter checkpoint-focused and function-focused panels, we studied classical Hodgkin's lymphoma (cHL), where systemic T cells have not been investigated in detail. terraFlow revealed immune perturbations in patients, including elevated activated, exhausted, and interleukin (IL)-17+ phenotypes, along with diminished early, interferon (IFN)γ+, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)+ T cells before treatment; many perturbations remained after treatment. terraFlow identified more disease-associated differences than other tools, often with better predictive power, and included a non-gating approach, eliminating time-consuming and subjective manual thresholds. It also reports a method to identify the smallest set of markers distinguishing study groups. Our results provide mechanistic support for past reports of immune deficiency in cHL and demonstrate the value of terraFlow in immunotherapy and biomarker studies.
PMID: 39128003
ISSN: 2211-1247
CID: 5701882

The role of autologous stem-cell transplantation in classical Hodgkin lymphoma in the modern era

Varma, Gaurav; Diefenbach, Catherine
Despite excellent cure rates with modern front-line regimens, up to 20% of patients with Hodgkin lymphoma will progress through front-line therapy or experience disease relapse. Worldwide, salvage chemotherapy followed by high-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell transplantation (HDT/ASCT) is considered the standard of care for these patients and can cure approximately 50% of relapsed or refractory (R/R) patients in the second line. Brentuximab vedotin (BV), an anti-CD30 antibody drug conjugate, and PD1 inhibitors like nivolumab and pembrolizumab, have high response rates in patients who recur after HDT/ASCT. When used prior to HDT/ASCT, BV and PD1 inhibitors appear to dramatically increase the effectiveness of salvage therapies with complete response rates often double those seen with historic chemotherapy-based regimens and durable progression free survival (PFS) post-HDT/ASCT. Emerging data in adults and from pediatric trials showing a durable PFS in a subset of relapsed patients raises the question of whether HDT/ASCT is essential for cure in R/R patients after PD1 based salvage. Future studies will help clarify if ASCT can omitted PD1 based salvage to avoid the potential toxicity of HDT/ASCT without compromising cure.
PMID: 39039012
ISSN: 1532-8686
CID: 5723502

Tumor-Immune Signatures of Treatment Resistance to Brentuximab Vedotin with Ipilimumab and/or Nivolumab in Hodgkin Lymphoma

Gonzalez-Kozlova, Edgar; Huang, Hsin-Hui; Jagede, Opeyemi A; Tuballes, Kevin; Del Valle, Diane M; Kelly, Geoffrey; Patel, Manishkumar; Xie, Hui; Harris, Jocelyn; Argueta, Kimberly; Nie, Kai; Barcessat, Vanessa; Moravec, Radim; Altreuter, Jennifer; Duose, Dzifa Y; Kahl, Brad S; Ansell, Stephen M; Yu, Joyce; Cerami, Ethan; Lindsay, James R; Wistuba, Ignacio I; Kim-Schulze, Seunghee; Diefenbach, Catherine S; Gnjatic, Sacha
UNLABELLED:To investigate the cellular and molecular mechanisms associated with targeting CD30-expressing Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) and immune checkpoint modulation induced by combination therapies of CTLA4 and PD1, we leveraged Phase 1/2 multicenter open-label trial NCT01896999 that enrolled patients with refractory or relapsed HL (R/R HL). Using peripheral blood, we assessed soluble proteins, cell composition, T-cell clonality, and tumor antigen-specific antibodies in 54 patients enrolled in the phase 1 component of the trial. NCT01896999 reported high (>75%) overall objective response rates with brentuximab vedotin (BV) in combination with ipilimumab (I) and/or nivolumab (N) in patients with R/R HL. We observed a durable increase in soluble PD1 and plasmacytoid dendritic cells as well as decreases in plasma CCL17, ANGPT2, MMP12, IL13, and CXCL13 in N-containing regimens (BV + N and BV + I + N) compared with BV + I (P < 0.05). Nonresponders and patients with short progression-free survival showed elevated CXCL9, CXCL13, CD5, CCL17, adenosine-deaminase, and MUC16 at baseline or after one treatment cycle and a higher prevalence of NY-ESO-1-specific autoantibodies (P < 0.05). The results suggest a circulating tumor-immune-derived signature of BV ± I ± N treatment resistance that may be useful for patient stratification in combination checkpoint therapy. SIGNIFICANCE/UNASSIGNED:Identification of multi-omic immune markers from peripheral blood may help elucidate resistance mechanisms to checkpoint inhibitor and antibody-drug conjugate combinations with potential implications for treatment decisions in relapsed HL.
PMCID:11247952
PMID: 38934093
ISSN: 2767-9764
CID: 5698082

KLRG1, Another Opportunity for a Breakthrough in MTCL

Varma, Gaurav; Diefenbach, Catherine S
Outcomes in mature T-cell lymphomas remain poor, with previous attempts at developing mAbs compromised by limited efficacy and significant immunocompromise. Anti-killer cell lectin-like receptor G1 mAbs may have greater selectivity and specificity for malignant T cells and avoid the toxicity concerns with previous agents. See related article by Assatova et al., p. 2514.
PMID: 38568191
ISSN: 1557-3265
CID: 5664652

Safety and efficacy of zandelisib plus zanubrutinib in previously treated follicular and mantle cell lymphomas

Soumerai, Jacob D; Diefenbach, Catherine S; Jagadeesh, Deepa; Asch, Adam; Kumar, Abhijeet; Tsai, Michaela L; Jandl, Thomas A; Lossos, Izidore S; Kenkre, Vaishalee P; Awan, Farrukh; Novotny, William; Huang, Jane; Miao, Lu; Rajagopalan, Prabhu; Ghalie, Richard G; Zelenetz, Andrew D
The combination of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase delta (PI3Kδ) inhibitor zandelisib with the Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor zanubrutinib was hypothesized to be synergistic and prevent resistance to single-agent therapy. This phase 1 study (NCT02914938) included a dose-finding stage in patients with relapsed/refractory (R/R) B-cell malignancies (n = 20) and disease-specific expansion cohorts in follicular lymphoma (FL; n = 31) or mantle cell lymphoma (MCL; n = 19). The recommended phase 2 dose was zandelisib 60 mg on Days 1-7 plus zanubrutinib 80 mg twice daily continuously in 28-day cycle. In the total population, the most common adverse events (AEs; all grades/grade 3-4) were neutropenia (35%/24%), diarrhoea (33%/2%), thrombocytopenia (32%/8%), anaemia (27%/8%), increased creatinine (25%/0%), contusion (21%/0%), fatigue (21%/2%), nausea (21%/2%) and increased aspartate aminotransferase (24%/6%). Three patients discontinued due to AEs. The overall response rate was 87% (complete response [CR] = 33%) for FL and 74% (CR = 47%) for MCL. The median duration of response and progression-free survival (PFS) were not reached in either group. The estimated 1-year PFS was 72.3% (95% confidence interval [CI], 51.9-85.1) for FL and 56.3% (95% CI, 28.9-76.7) for MCL (median follow-up: 16.5 and 10.9 months respectively). Zandelisib plus zanubrutinib was associated with high response rates and no increased toxicity compared to either agent alone.
PMID: 38500476
ISSN: 1365-2141
CID: 5640282

Mosunetuzumab Safety Profile in Patients With Relapsed/Refractory B-cell Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma: Clinical Management Experience From a Pivotal Phase I/II Trial

Matasar, Matthew; Bartlett, Nancy L; Shadman, Mazyar; Budde, Lihua E; Flinn, Ian; Gregory, Gareth P; Kim, Won Seog; Hess, Georg; El-Sharkawi, Dima; Diefenbach, Catherine S; Huang, Huang; To, Iris; Parreira, Joana; Wu, Mei; Kwan, Antonia; Assouline, Sarit
BACKGROUND:Mosunetuzumab is a CD20xCD3 T-cell engaging bispecific antibody approved in Europe and the United States for relapsed/refractory (R/R) follicular lymphoma (FL) after ≥ 2 prior therapies. MATERIALS AND METHODS:We present interim safety data from the mosunetuzumab GO29781 (NCT02500407) phase I/II dose-escalation study in R/R non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), focusing on FL. RESULTS:Overall, 218 patients with R/R NHL, including 90 with R/R FL, received a median of eight 21-day cycles of intravenous mosunetuzumab with step-up dosing in Cycle (C) 1 (C1 Day [D] 1, 1 mg; C1D8, 2 mg; C1D15/C2D1, 60 mg; C3D1 and onwards, 30 mg). Cytokine release syndrome (CRS) was the most common adverse event (AE), occurring in 39.4% (NHL) and 44.4% (FL) of patients. Events occurred predominantly during C1 at the first loading dose; the majority were grade 1/2. CRS events were managed at the investigator's discretion with supportive care, steroids, and tocilizumab, based on protocol management guidelines. Immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome was uncommon, reported in 0.9% (NHL) and 1.1% (FL) of patients. Neutropenia occurred in 27.5% (NHL) and 28.9% (FL) of patients (mostly grade 3/4) and could be effectively managed using granulocyte colony-stimulating factor. Tumor lysis syndrome occurred in 0.9% (NHL) and 1.1% (FL) of patients (all grade 3/4 with CRS; all resolved). CONCLUSION:Mosunetuzumab monotherapy as treatment for R/R B-cell NHL, including FL, was associated with low rates of severe AEs (including CRS) and is suitable for outpatient administration in the community setting. Adapted protocol guidance for the management of select AEs during mosunetuzumab treatment is included.
PMID: 38195322
ISSN: 2152-2669
CID: 5726102