Clinical Pharmacology Perspectives for Adoptive Cell Therapies in Oncology
- PMID: 34888856
- PMCID: PMC9786613
- DOI: 10.1002/cpt.2509
Clinical Pharmacology Perspectives for Adoptive Cell Therapies in Oncology
Abstract
Adoptive cell therapies (ACTs) have shown transformative efficacy in oncology with five US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approvals for chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies in hematological malignancies, and promising activity for T cell receptor T-cell therapies in both liquid and solid tumors. Clinical pharmacology can play a pivotal role in optimizing ACTs, aided by modeling and simulation toolboxes and deep understanding of the underlying biological and immunological processes. Close collaboration and multilevel data integration across functions, including chemistry, manufacturing, and control, biomarkers, bioanalytical, and clinical science and safety teams will be critical to ACT development. As ACT is comprised of alive, polyfunctional, and heterogeneous immune cells, its overall physicochemical and pharmacological property is vastly different from other platforms/modalities, such as small molecule and protein therapeutics. In this review, we first describe the unique kinetics of T cells and the appropriate bioanalytical strategies to characterize cellular kinetics. We then assess the distinct aspects of clinical pharmacology for ACTs in comparison to traditional small molecule and protein therapeutics. Additionally, we provide a review for the five FDA-approved CAR T-cell therapies and summarize their properties, cellular kinetic characteristics, dose-exposure-response relationship, and potential baseline factors/variables in product, patient, and regimen that may affect the safety and efficacy. Finally, we probe into existing empirical and mechanistic quantitative techniques to understand how various modeling and simulation approaches can support clinical pharmacology strategy and propose key considerations to be incorporated and explored in future models.
© 2021 Genentech, Inc. Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors are salaried employees and stockholders of Roche/Genentech. N.K. is a salaried employee of Chugai Pharmaceutical.
References
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- Norelli, M. , Casucci, M. , Bonini, C. & Bondanza, A. Clinical pharmacology of CAR‐T cells: Linking cellular pharmacodynamics to pharmacokinetics and antitumor effects. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1865, 90–100 (2016). - PubMed
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- Newick, K. , O'Brien, S. , Moon, E. & Albelda, S.M. CAR T cell therapy for solid tumors. Annu. Rev. Med. 68, 139–152 (2017). - PubMed
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