Treatment failure patterns in early versus late introduction of CAR T-cell therapy in large B-cell lymphoma
- PMID: 39893244
- DOI: 10.1038/s41409-025-02519-z
Treatment failure patterns in early versus late introduction of CAR T-cell therapy in large B-cell lymphoma
Abstract
CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy has recently been approved as second-line treatment for relapsed/refractory large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL). This study compares patterns of disease relapse and progression across patients receiving CAR-T as second-line (early administration) versus third or subsequent lines (late administration). We analyzed 354 patients treated with Axicabtagene ciloleucel (71%) and Lisocabtagene maraleucel (29%); 80 (23%) received early administration, and 274 (77%) late administration. One-year overall survival was higher in the early group (82% [95% CI 72-93] vs. 71% [95% CI 66-77], p = 0.048). However, the survival benefit was not sustained in multivariable Cox regression modeling and propensity score matching. One-year cumulative incidences of relapse were similar (37% [95% CI 24-50] vs. 43% [95% CI 37-49], p = 0.2), as were 1-year progression-free survival probabilities (62% [95% CI 50-76] vs. 50% [95% CI 44-57], p = 0.14). The early group exhibited a favorable toxicity profile, with lower rate of grade ≥2 cytokine release syndrome (26% vs. 39%, p = 0.031) and reduced cumulative incidence of severe neutropenia (41% [95% CI 30-52] vs. 55% [95% CI 49-60], p = 0.027). Our results indicate favorable outcomes with CAR-T irrespective of treatment line. The equivalence in disease control suggests that CAR-T resistance mechanisms persist in LBCL failing first-line therapy.
© 2025. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: Perales reports honoraria from Adicet, Allogene, Allovir, Caribou Biosciences, Celgene, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Equilium, Exevir, ImmPACT Bio, Incyte, Karyopharm, Kite/Gilead, Merck, Miltenyi Biotec, MorphoSys, Nektar Therapeutics, Novartis, Omeros, OrcaBio, Sanofi, Syncopation, VectivBio AG, and Vor Biopharma. He serves on DSMBs for Cidara Therapeutics and Sellas Life Sciences, and the scientific advisory board of NexImmune. He has ownership interests in NexImmune, Omeros, and OrcaBio. He has received institutional research support for clinical trials from Allogene, Incyte, Kite/Gilead, Miltenyi Biotec, Nektar Therapeutics, and Novartis. Lori Leslie reports honoraria/consulting/speaker bureau from Gilead/Kite, SeaGen, ADC Therapeutics, Celgene/BMS, Janssen/J&J, Pharmacyclics, Beigene, Abbvie, Genmab, AstraZeneca, TG Therapeutics, Epizyme, Karyopharm, Merck, Eli Lily. Gunjan Shah has research funding to the institution from Janssen, Amgen, BMS, Beyond Spring, and GPCR, and is on the DSMB for ArcellX. K.R. Kite/Gilead: Research Funding, Consultancy, Honoraria, and travel support; Novartis: Honoraria; BMS/Celgene: Consultancy, Honoraria; Pierre-Fabre: travel support. Lori A Leslie reports honoraria/consulting/speaker bureau from Gilead/Kite, SeaGen, ADC Therapeutics, Celgene/BMS, Janssen/J&J, Pharmacyclics, Beigene, Abbvie, Genmab, AstraZeneca, TG Therapeutics, Epizyme, Karyopharm, Merck, Eli Lily. Michael Scordo has served as a paid consultant for McKinsey & Company, Angiocrine Bioscience, and Omeros; has received research funding from Angiocrine Bioscience and Omeros; has served on ad hoc advisory boards for Kite Pharma; and has received honoraria from i3Health and Medscape for CME related activity. Dr. Sergio A. Giralt is a consultant for and receives research funding from Amgen, Actinium, Celgene, Johnson & Johnson, and Takeda and is a consultant for Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Novartis, Kite Pharma, and Spectrum Pharmaceuticals. Samantha Brown receives salary support from AACR Project GENIE Biopharma Collaborative. The remaining authors declare no competing interests.
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