Blood Cancer Journal (Oct 2024)

Immune effector cell-associated enterocolitis following chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy in multiple myeloma

  • Gliceida Galarza Fortuna,
  • Rahul Banerjee,
  • Constanza Savid-Frontera,
  • Jinming Song,
  • Carlos M. Morán-Segura,
  • Jonathan V. Nguyen,
  • Lazaros Lekakis,
  • Sebastian Fernandez-Pol,
  • Annie N. Samraj,
  • Kikkeri N. Naresh,
  • Mariola Vazquez-Martinez,
  • Rachid C. Baz,
  • Jay Y. Spiegel,
  • Lekha Mikkilineni,
  • John M. Gubatan,
  • Surbhi Sidana,
  • Andre de Menezes Silva Corraes,
  • Nilesh M. Kalariya,
  • Krina K. Patel,
  • Kevin G. Shim,
  • Rafael Fonseca,
  • Christopher Ferreri,
  • Peter M. Voorhees,
  • Shambavi Richard,
  • Cesar Rodriguez Valdes,
  • Sireesha Asoori,
  • Jeffrey L. Wolf,
  • Andrew J. Cowan,
  • Douglas W. Sborov,
  • Frederick L. Locke,
  • Yi Lin,
  • Yinghong Wang,
  • Doris K. Hansen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41408-024-01167-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract We report 14 cases of immune effector cell (IEC)-associated enterocolitis following chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy in multiple myeloma, with a 1.2% incidence overall (0.2% for idecabtagene vicleucel and 2.2% for ciltacabtagene autoleucel). Patients developed acute-onset symptoms (typically non-bloody Grade 3+ diarrhea) with negative infectious workup beginning a median of 92.5 days (range: 22–210 days) after CAR-T therapy and a median of 85 days after cytokine release syndrome resolution. Gut biopsies uniformly demonstrated inflammation, including intra-epithelial lymphocytosis and villous blunting. In one case where CAR-specific immunofluorescence stains were available, CAR T-cell presence was confirmed within the lamina propria. Systemic corticosteroids were initiated in 10 patients (71%) a median of 25.5 days following symptom onset, with symptom improvement in 40%. Subsequent infliximab or vedolizumab led to improvement in 50% and 33% of corticosteroid-refractory patients, respectively. Five patients (36%) have died from bowel perforation or treatment-emergent sepsis. In conclusion, IEC-associated enterocolitis is a distinct but rare complication of CAR-T therapy typically beginning 1–3 months after infusion. Thorough diagnostic workup is essential, including evaluation for potential T-cell malignancies. The early use of infliximab or vedolizumab may potentially hasten symptom resolution and lower reliance on high-dose corticosteroids during the post-CAR-T period.