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Safety and clinical outcomes of a first-in-human trial of point-of-care manufactured trispecific CAR T cells targeting CD19, CD20, and CD22.

1/5 보강
Research square 📖 저널 OA 100% 2023: 1/1 OA 2025: 35/35 OA 2026: 42/42 OA 2023~2026 2026 OA
Retraction 확인
출처

PICO 자동 추출 (휴리스틱, conf 3/4)

유사 논문
P · Population 대상 환자/모집단
환자: relapsed/refractory B-cell malignancies
I · Intervention 중재 / 시술
fresh infusions at a median vein to vein time of 7 days, at doses of 0
C · Comparison 대조 / 비교
추출되지 않음
O · Outcome 결과 / 결론
T-cell exhaustion in apheresis cells correlated with progressive disease. Trispecific CAR T cells are safe and potentially active in non-Hodgkin lymphoma.

Vasu S, Denlinger N, Song NJ, Elsberry D, Zhao Q, Yu L

📝 환자 설명용 한 줄

Disease recurrence is the main cause of treatment failure after CD19-directed CAR T cells and is often due to CD19 antigen loss, stability and/or coverage.

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↓ .bib ↓ .ris
APA Vasu S, Denlinger N, et al. (2026). Safety and clinical outcomes of a first-in-human trial of point-of-care manufactured trispecific CAR T cells targeting CD19, CD20, and CD22.. Research square. https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-8605291/v1
MLA Vasu S, et al.. "Safety and clinical outcomes of a first-in-human trial of point-of-care manufactured trispecific CAR T cells targeting CD19, CD20, and CD22.." Research square, 2026.
PMID 41727591 ↗

Abstract

Disease recurrence is the main cause of treatment failure after CD19-directed CAR T cells and is often due to CD19 antigen loss, stability and/or coverage. To overcome single-antigen escape, we evaluated a trispecific CAR targeting CD19, CD20, and CD22 with OX40 co-stimulatory domain. Preclinical studies demonstrated potent, antigen-specific cytotoxicity in both in vitro and in vivo lymphoma models. We then conducted a first-in-human phase I trial in patients with relapsed/refractory B-cell malignancies. Fifteen patients received fresh infusions at a median vein to vein time of 7 days, at doses of 0.5-2×10 cells/kg. No severe cytokine release syndrome nor immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome occurred. Overall response rate was 50%, including complete responses in 83% of lymphoma patients. One-year overall survival rate was 61%, with durable remissions observed in lymphoma. CAR T expansion did not correlate with dose or response. T-cell exhaustion in apheresis cells correlated with progressive disease. Trispecific CAR T cells are safe and potentially active in non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
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