University of Kansas Cancer Center, Division of Hematologic Malignancies and Cellular Therapeutics, Westwood, Kansas.
Blood and Marrow Transplantation, LDS Hospital, Intermountain Healthcare, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Transplant Cell Ther. 2023 Jul;29(7):440-448. doi: 10.1016/j.jtct.2023.04.003. Epub 2023 Apr 7.
Diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most prevalent subtype of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Although outcomes to frontline therapy are encouraging, patients who are refractory to or in relapse after first-line therapy experience inferior outcomes. A significant proportion of patients treated with additional lines of cytotoxic chemotherapy ultimately succumb to their disease, as established in the SCHOLAR-1 study. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy is a novel approach to cancer management that reprograms a patient's own T cells to better target and eliminate cancer cells. It was initially approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for patients with relapsed/refractory (r/r) DLBCL as a third line of treatment. Based on recently published randomized data, CAR-T therapy (axicabtagene ciloleucel and lisocabtagene maraleucel) also has been approved as a second line of treatment for patients who are primary refractory or relapse within 12 months of first-line therapy. Despite the proven efficacy in treating r/r DLBCL with CD19-directed CAR-T therapy, several barriers may prevent eligible patients from receiving treatment. Barriers to CAR-T therapy include cost of therapy, patient hesitancy, required travel to academic treatment centers, nonreferrals, poor understanding of CAR-T therapy, lack of caregiver support, knowledge of available resources, and timely patient selection by referring oncologists. In this review, we provide an overview of the FDA-approved CD19-directed CAR-T cell therapies (tisagenlecleucel, axicabtagene ciloleucel, and lisocabtagene maraleucel) from pivotal clinical trials and supporting real-world evidence from retrospective studies. In both clinical trials and real-world settings, CAR-T therapy has been shown to be safe and efficacious for treating patients with r/r DLBCL: however, several barriers prevent eligible patients from accessing these therapies. Barriers to referrals for CAR-T therapy are described, along with recommendations to improve collaboration between community oncologists and physicians from CAR-T therapy treatment centers and subsequent long-term care of patients in community treatment centers.
弥漫性大 B 细胞淋巴瘤 (DLBCL) 是非霍奇金淋巴瘤中最常见的亚型。尽管一线治疗的结果令人鼓舞,但对一线治疗耐药或复发的患者预后较差。在 SCHOLAR-1 研究中,相当一部分接受额外化疗线治疗的患者最终死于疾病。嵌合抗原受体 (CAR) T 细胞治疗是一种新型的癌症管理方法,它可以重新编程患者自身的 T 细胞,以更好地靶向和消除癌细胞。它最初被美国食品和药物管理局批准用于治疗复发/难治性 (r/r) DLBCL,作为三线治疗。基于最近发表的随机数据,CAR-T 治疗(axicabtagene ciloleucel 和 lisocabtagene maraleucel)也已被批准用于一线治疗后 12 个月内原发性耐药或复发的患者的二线治疗。尽管 CD19 靶向 CAR-T 治疗在治疗 r/r DLBCL 方面已被证实具有疗效,但仍存在一些障碍可能会阻止符合条件的患者接受治疗。CAR-T 治疗的障碍包括治疗费用、患者的犹豫、前往学术治疗中心的需要、未转诊、对 CAR-T 治疗的理解不足、缺乏护理人员的支持、对可用资源的了解以及转诊肿瘤学家对患者的及时选择。在这篇综述中,我们提供了 FDA 批准的 CD19 靶向 CAR-T 细胞疗法(tisagenlecleucel、axicabtagene ciloleucel 和 lisocabtagene maraleucel)的概述,以及来自回顾性研究的支持真实世界证据。在临床试验和真实世界环境中,CAR-T 治疗已被证明对治疗 r/r DLBCL 患者是安全有效的:然而,一些障碍阻止了符合条件的患者获得这些治疗。描述了 CAR-T 治疗转诊的障碍,并提出了一些建议,以改善社区肿瘤学家与 CAR-T 治疗中心的医生之间的合作,以及随后在社区治疗中心对患者的长期护理。