Nature Communications (Feb 2024)

A phase 1/2 clinical trial of invariant natural killer T cell therapy in moderate-severe acute respiratory distress syndrome

  • Terese C. Hammond,
  • Marco A. Purbhoo,
  • Sapana Kadel,
  • Jerome Ritz,
  • Sarah Nikiforow,
  • Heather Daley,
  • Kit Shaw,
  • Koen van Besien,
  • Alexandra Gomez-Arteaga,
  • Don Stevens,
  • Waldo Ortuzar,
  • Xavier Michelet,
  • Rachel Smith,
  • Darrian Moskowitz,
  • Reed Masakayan,
  • Burcu Yigit,
  • Shannon Boi,
  • Kah Teong Soh,
  • John Chamberland,
  • Xin Song,
  • Yu Qin,
  • Ilya Mishchenko,
  • Maurice Kirby,
  • Valeriia Nasonenko,
  • Alexa Buffa,
  • Jennifer S. Buell,
  • Dhan Chand,
  • Marc van Dijk,
  • Justin Stebbing,
  • Mark A. Exley

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-44905-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells, a unique T cell population, lend themselves for use as adoptive therapy due to diverse roles in orchestrating immune responses. Originally developed for use in cancer, agenT-797 is a donor-unrestricted allogeneic ex vivo expanded iNKT cell therapy. We conducted an open-label study in virally induced acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome-2 virus (trial registration NCT04582201). Here we show that agenT-797 rescues exhausted T cells and rapidly activates both innate and adaptive immunity. In 21 ventilated patients including 5 individuals receiving veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV-ECMO), there are no dose-limiting toxicities. We observe an anti-inflammatory systemic cytokine response and infused iNKT cells are persistent during follow-up, inducing only transient donor-specific antibodies. Clinical signals of associated survival and prevention of secondary infections are evident. Cellular therapy using off-the-shelf iNKT cells is safe, can be rapidly scaled and is associated with an anti-inflammatory response. The safety and therapeutic potential of iNKT cells across diseases including infections and cancer, warrants randomized-controlled trials.