High pretreatment disease burden as a risk factor for infectious complications following CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy for large B-cell lymphoma.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
38434533
Description
Infection has emerged as the chief cause of non-relapse mortality (NRM) post CD19-targeting chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy (CAR-T) therapy. Even though up to 50% of patients may remain infection-free, many suffer multiple severe, life-threatening, or fatal infectious events. The primary aim of this study was to explore severe and life-threatening infections post licensed CAR-T therapy in large B-cell lymphoma, with a focus on the role of disease burden and disease sites in assessing individual risk. We sought to understand the cohort of patients who experience ≥2 infections and those at the highest risk of infectious NRM. Our analysis identifies a higher disease burden after bridging therapy as associated with infection events. Those developing ≥2 infections emerged as a uniquely high-risk cohort, particularly if the second (or beyond) infection occurred during an episode of immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS) or while on steroids and/or anakinra for ICANS. Herein, we also describe the first reported cases of "CAR-T cold sepsis," a phenomenon characterized by the lack of an appreciable systemic inflammatory response at the time of detection of infection. We propose a risk-based strategy to encourage heightened clinician awareness of cold sepsis, with a view to reducing NRM.
Date of Publication
2024-01
Publication Type
Article
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
O'Reilly, Maeve A | |
Neill, Lorna | |
Collin, Simon M | |
Stone, Neil | |
Springell, Deborah | |
Mensah, Jeremy | |
Cheok, Kathleen P L | |
Benjamin, Reuben | |
Kuhnl, Andrea | |
Roddie, Claire | |
Sanderson, Robin |
Additional Credits
Series
HemaSphere
Publisher
Wiley
ISSN
2572-9241
Access(Rights)
open.access