Management of cytokine release syndrome and neurotoxicity in chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy

UH Acharya, T Dhawale, S Yun… - Expert Review of …, 2019 - Taylor & Francis
UH Acharya, T Dhawale, S Yun, CA Jacobson, JC Chavez, JD Ramos, J Appelbaum
Expert Review of Hematology, 2019Taylor & Francis
Introduction: Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell immunotherapy has demonstrated
remarkable anti-tumor activity in B-cell malignancies and is under investigation in other
hematologic malignancies and solid tumors. While highly efficacious, post-infusion T cell
activity often results in massive cytokine release precipitating cytokine release syndrome
(CRS), the signature toxicity of CAR T cells. This toxicity is characterized by systemic
immune activation resulting in fever, hypotension, respiratory insufficiency and capillary …
Abstract
Introduction: Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell immunotherapy has demonstrated remarkable anti-tumor activity in B-cell malignancies and is under investigation in other hematologic malignancies and solid tumors. While highly efficacious, post-infusion T cell activity often results in massive cytokine release precipitating cytokine release syndrome (CRS), the signature toxicity of CAR T cells. This toxicity is characterized by systemic immune activation resulting in fever, hypotension, respiratory insufficiency and capillary leak. Either in conjunction with or in the absence of CRS, a subset of patients may also develop mild to severe neurotoxicity. Although the precise pathogenesis of CRS and neurotoxicity aren’t fully elucidated, risk factors and mitigation strategies have been reported.
Areas covered: This manuscript provides an in-depth overview of the pathogenesis, clinical characteristics, current toxicity management strategies, and future perspectives pertaining to CRS and neurotoxicity.
Expert Opinion: As CAR T cell based therapies gain popularity in the management of various malignancies, the complimentary toxicities of CRS and neurotoxicity pose a clinical challenge in practice. Risk adaptive modeling incorporating disease profile, patient demographics, lymphodepletion, cell dosing, CAR T construct, and potentially cytokine gene polymorphisms may be instructive to assess individualized risk and optimal CRS/neurotoxicity management.
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