Due to the
Investigators have now shown how a molecular «switch» (inducible caspase 9 or iC9) that is activated by a single dose of a
The team presented results from a Phase 1 clinical trial today in a presentation at the American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy annual meeting in New Orleans. The results were simultaneously published in the American Society of Hematology journal, Blood.
The clinical study is the center’s most recent quest to pioneer the safety and efficacy of T cell therapy, which harnesses the immune system and specially modified T cells to attack and destroy cancers of the immune system such as leukemia and lymphoma, as well as restore immunity in serious immunodeficiency disorders.
«We’ve shown that the therapy (T cells with antiviral specificity and a
«This switch allows us to eliminate the donor cells that cause graft versus host disease but leave behind the component that fights viral infection," said Dr. Malcolm Brenner, professor in the Center and a corresponding author on the report.
The study included 12 patients (range between 2 to 50
Removing all
Four patients who received the
In a surprise finding, Zhou and colleagues showed for the first time that the
In the current study, one patient also developed a potentially
«This is an important advance for patients who develop a life threatening complication called graft versus host disease," said Zhou. «This could lead to rapid resolution for those patients without compromising their T cell therapy.»
The chemical drug and the inducible caspase 9 suicide gene «switch» it activates are currently being developed by Bellicum Pharmaceuticals.
The Center for Cell and Gene Therapy is a major component of the translational cancer cell and gene therapy program in the
Additional authors on this report include Gianpietro Dotti, Robert A. Krance, Caridad A. Martinez, Rammurti T. Kamble, Swati Naik, April G. Durett, Olga Dakhova, Barbara Savoldo, Antonio Di Stasi,
Funding for this work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (U54HL08100, P01CA094237 and P50CA126752); the Clinical Research Center at Texas Children’s Hospital; the Institute for Clinical and Translational Research at Baylor; and shared resources of the Dan L. Duncan Cancer at Baylor.
Glenna Vickers 713-798-4710 Houston, TXhttps://www.bcm.edu/news/cell-