Donor regulatory T-cell therapy to prevent graft-versus-host disease
- PMID: 39792934
- DOI: 10.1182/blood.2024026446
Donor regulatory T-cell therapy to prevent graft-versus-host disease
Abstract
Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation is a curative therapy limited by graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). In preclinical studies and early-phase clinical studies, enrichment of donor regulatory T cells (Tregs) appears to prevent GVHD and promote healthy immunity. We enrolled 44 patients in an open-label, single-center, phase 2 efficacy study investigating if a precision selected and highly purified Treg therapy manufactured from donor-mobilized peripheral blood improves 1-year GVHD-free relapse-free survival (GRFS) after myeloablative conditioning. We compared this study arm with a concomitant standard-of-care (SOC) cohort. All donor Treg products were successfully manufactured and administered without cryopreservation within 72 hours. Participants had a 1-year incidence of acute grade 3 to 4 GVHD of 7%, moderate to severe chronic GVHD of 11%, and nonrelapse mortality rate of 4.5%. The primary end point of significantly improved 1-year GRFS was achieved at 64% evaluated against a predicted incidence of 40% (P = .002) with a realized incidence of 36% in the SOC comparator. For those trial patients who developed grade 2 to 4 acute GVHD, 91% responded to front-line corticosteroid therapy, whereas 50% responded in the SOC comparator group. Trial participants had a reduced incidence and burden of GVHD and improved GRFS, compared with rates common to highly variable unmanipulated donor grafts and multiagent immune suppression. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01660607.
© 2025 American Society of Hematology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
Comment in
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Donor regulatory/conventional T-cell grafts for the GVHD win?Blood. 2025 May 1;145(18):1964-1965. doi: 10.1182/blood.2024028047. Blood. 2025. PMID: 40310660 No abstract available.
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