Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development (Sep 2021)

Depletion of high-content CD14+ cells from apheresis products is critical for successful transduction and expansion of CAR T cells during large-scale cGMP manufacturing

  • Xiuyan Wang,
  • Oriana Borquez-Ojeda,
  • Jolanta Stefanski,
  • Fang Du,
  • Jinrong Qu,
  • Jagrutiben Chaudhari,
  • Keyur Thummar,
  • Mingzhu Zhu,
  • Ling-bo Shen,
  • Melanie Hall,
  • Paridhi Gautam,
  • Yongzeng Wang,
  • Brigitte Sénéchal,
  • Devanjan Sikder,
  • Prasad S. Adusumilli,
  • Renier J. Brentjens,
  • Kevin Curran,
  • Mark B. Geyer,
  • Sham Mailankhody,
  • Roisin O’Cearbhaill,
  • Jae H. Park,
  • Craig Sauter,
  • Susan Slovin,
  • Eric L. Smith,
  • Isabelle Rivière

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22
pp. 377 – 387

Abstract

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With the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of four CD19- and one BCMA-targeted chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) therapy for B cell malignancies, CAR T cell therapy has finally reached the status of a medicinal product. The successful manufacturing of autologous CAR T cell products is a key requirement for this promising treatment modality. By analyzing the composition of 214 apheresis products from 210 subjects across eight disease indications, we found that high CD14+ cell content poses a challenge for manufacturing CAR T cells, especially in patients with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and multiple myeloma caused by the non-specific phagocytosis of the magnetic beads used to activate CD3+ T cells. We demonstrated that monocyte depletion via rapid plastic surface adhesion significantly reduces the CD14+ monocyte content in the apheresis products and simultaneously boosts the CD3+ content. We established a 40% CD14+ threshold for the stratification of apheresis products across nine clinical trials and demonstrated the effectiveness of this procedure by comparing manufacturing runs in two phase 1 clinical trials. Our study suggests that CD14+ content should be monitored in apheresis products, and that the manufacturing of CAR T cells should incorporate a step that lessens the CD14+ cell content in apheresis products containing more than 40% to maximize the production success.

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