Cell Transplantation (Sep 2023)

Haploidentical Natural Killer Cell Therapy as an Adjunct to Stem Cell Transplantation for Treatment of Refractory Acute Myeloid Leukemia

  • Uday Kulkarni,
  • Arun Kumar Arunachalam,
  • Hamenth Kumar Palani,
  • Reeshma Radhakrishnan Nair,
  • Nithya Balasundaram,
  • Arvind Venkatraman,
  • Anu Korula,
  • Sushil Selvarajan,
  • Sharon Lionel,
  • Poonkuzhali Balasubramanian,
  • Madhavi Maddali,
  • Aby Abraham,
  • Biju George,
  • Vikram Mathews

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/09636897231198178
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32

Abstract

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Refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML), defined as failure of two cycles of induction therapy at diagnosis or of one cycle at relapse, represents a subgroup with poor outcomes. Haploidentical natural killer cell (NK) therapy is a strategy that is being explored in refractory malignancies. Historically, at our center, patients with refractory AML have been treated with cytoreductive therapy (fludarabine + cytosine + granulocyte colony-stimulating factor ± idarubicin or mitoxantrone + etoposide) followed by 1-week rest and then reduced-intensity transplant with fludarabine + melphalan. We used the same backbone for this trial (CTRI/2019/02/017505) with the addition of CD56-positive cells from a family donor infused 1 day after the completion of chemotherapy. CD56-positive selection was done using a CliniMACS Prodigy system (Miltenyi Biotec, Bergisch Gladbach, Germany) followed by overnight incubation in autologous plasma with 2 micromolar arsenic trioxide and 500 U/mL of interleukin-2. From February 2019, 14 patients with a median age of 29 years (interquartile range [IQR]: 16.5–38.5) were enrolled in this trial. Six were females. Six had primary refractory AML while eight had relapsed refractory AML. The median CD56-cell dose infused was 46.16 × 106/kg (IQR: 25.06–70.36). One patient withdrew consent after NK cell infusion. Of the 13 patients who proceeded to transplant, five died of immediate post-transplant complications while two did not engraft but were in morphologic leukemia-free state (both subsequently died of infective complications after the second transplant). Of the remaining six patients who engrafted and survived beyond 1 month of the transplant, two developed disease relapse and died. The remaining four patients are alive and relapse free at the last follow-up (mean follow-up duration of surviving patients is 24 months). The 2-year estimated overall survival for the cohort was 28.6% ± 12.1% while the treatment-related mortality (TRM) with this approach was 38.5% ± 13.5%. Haploidentical NK cell therapy as an adjunct to transplant is safe and needs further exploration in patients with AML. For refractory AML, post-transplant NK infusion and strategies to reduce TRM while using pre-transplant NK infusion merit exploration.