Cancers (Mar 2023)

Long-Term Follow-Up of Bridging Therapies Prior to CAR T-Cell Therapy for Relapsed/Refractory Large B Cell Lymphoma

  • Colton Ladbury,
  • Savita Dandapani,
  • Claire Hao,
  • Mildred Fabros,
  • Arya Amini,
  • Sagus Sampath,
  • Scott Glaser,
  • Karen Sokolov,
  • Jekwon Yeh,
  • John H. Baird,
  • Swetha Kambhampati,
  • Alex Herrera,
  • Matthew Mei,
  • Liana Nikolaenko,
  • Geoffrey Shouse,
  • Lihua E. Budde

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15061747
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. 1747

Abstract

Read online

Background: Bridging therapy (BT) with systemic therapy (ST), radiation therapy (RT), or combined-modality therapy (CMT) is increasingly being utilized prior to chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy for large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL). We report the long-term outcomes of the patients who received commercial CAR T-cell therapy with or without BT. Methods: The patients with LBCL who underwent infusion of a commercial CD19 CAR T product were eligible. The radiation was stratified as comprehensive or focal. The efficacy outcomes and toxicity were analyzed. Results: In total, 156 patients were included and, of them, 52.5% of the patients received BT. The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 0.65 years in the BT cohort compared to 1.45 years in the non-BT cohort. The median overall survival (OS) was 3.16 years in the BT cohort and was not reached in the non-BT cohort. The patients who received comprehensive radiation (versus focal) had significantly improved PFS and OS, achieving a 1-year PFS of 100% vs. 9.1% and 1-year OS of 100% vs. 45.5%. There was no difference in the severe toxicity between any of the nonbridging or BT cohorts. Conclusions: BT did not appear to compromise outcomes with respect to response rates, disease control, survival, and toxicity. The patients with limited disease treated with RT had favorable outcomes.

Keywords