CAR-macrophage therapy for HER2-overexpressing advanced solid tumors: a phase 1 trial
- PMID: 39920391
- DOI: 10.1038/s41591-025-03495-z
CAR-macrophage therapy for HER2-overexpressing advanced solid tumors: a phase 1 trial
Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) macrophages (CAR-Ms) mediate antitumor immunity via phagocytosis, cytokine release, activation of the tumor microenvironment and antigen presentation. We report results from a non-prespecified interim analysis of a first-in-human, phase 1 clinical trial of CT-0508, an anti-human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) CAR-M in patients with advanced HER2-overexpressing tumors. Fourteen patients were treated across two different regimens. Patients with breast cancer and gastroesophageal cancer were primarily enrolled and had to have demonstrated overexpression of HER2 according to the American Society of Clinical Oncology/College of American Pathologists guidelines (HER2 immunohistochemistry 3+ or immunohistochemistry 2+/in situ hybridization-amplified). No lymphodepletion chemotherapy was used before infusion. The primary endpoints were safety and CAR-M manufacturability. Secondary endpoints included cellular kinetics and efficacy using objective response rate, overall survival, progression-free survival and duration of response. No dose-limiting toxicities, severe cytokine release syndrome (≥grade 3) or immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome were observed; 44% (n = 4 of 9, 95% confidence interval = 14-79%) of HER2 3+ tumors achieved stable disease as best overall response 8 weeks after treatment. No meaningful activity was observed in the HER2 2+ population (n = 5). Correlative analyses of serial biopsies confirmed that CT-0508 traffics to and remodels the tumor microenvironment, resulting in expansion of CD8+ T cells. These findings demonstrate the preliminary safety, tolerability and manufacturing feasibility of CT-0508 for HER2+ tumors. ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT04660929 .
© 2025. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: M. Klichinsky and S.G. are scientific cofounders of Carisma Therapeutics, and are equity shareholders and inventors of patents related to this work. M.S., M.B., R.Q., S.C.D., M.C., S.A., K.L., E.K., M. Klichinsky and T.C., are employees of Carisma Therapeutics. M. Kremp, B.H.S., P.S., R.F.S., D.B. and D.C. are former employees of Carisma Therapeutics. S.G. is a scientific advisory board member and shareholder of Carisma Therapeutics. S.G. has patents related to CAR therapy with royalties paid from Novartis to the University of Pennsylvania. S.G. is a scientific cofounder and holds equity in Interius Biotherapeutics. S.G. is a scientific adviser to Carisma Therapeutics, Cartography, Currus, Interius Biotherapeutics, Kite, NKILT, Mission Bio and Vor Bio. P.R.P. is a paid consultant with Pfizer, Seagen and Perthera, all outside of the submitted work. Y.A. is a paid consultant for Pfizer and AstraZeneca, and an unpaid consultant for Exact Sciences, all outside of the submitted work. This work was funded by Carisma Therapeutics, which is pursuing the commercial development of related products. The other authors declare no competing interests.
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