Changes in bone marrow tumor and immune cells correlate with durability of remissions following BCMA CAR T therapy in myeloma
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ABSTRACT: Chimeric antigen-receptor (CAR) T cells targeting B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA) lead to high response rates in myeloma, but most patients experience recurrent disease. We combined several high-dimensional approaches to study tumor/immune cells in the tumor microenvironment of myeloma patients pre- and post-BCMA-specific CAR T therapy. A lower diversity of pre-therapy T-cell-receptor (TCR) repertoire, presence of hyperexpanded clones with an exhaustion phenotype, and BAFF+PD-L1+ myeloid cells in the marrow correlated with shorter progression-free survival (PFS) following CAR T therapy. In contrast, longer PFS was associated with increased proportion of CLEC9A+ dendritic cells (DCs), and CD27+TCF1+ T cells with diverse T-cell receptors, followed by emergence of T cells expressing marrow-residence genes. Residual tumor cells at initial response express stem-like genes and tumor recurrence in patients with long PFS was associated with emergence of new dominant clones. These data illustrate dynamic interplay between endogenous T, infused CAR T, myeloid/DC and tumor compartments that impacts durability of response following CAR T therapy in myeloma.
ORGANISM(S): Homo sapiens
PROVIDER: GSE210079 | GEO | 2022/08/11
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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