Novel approaches to enhance the specificity and safety of engineered T cells

VD Fedorov, M Sadelain, CC Kloss - The Cancer Journal, 2014 - journals.lww.com
VD Fedorov, M Sadelain, CC Kloss
The Cancer Journal, 2014journals.lww.com
T-cell therapies using engineered T cells show great promise for cancer immunotherapy, as
illustrated by the CD19 paradigm. Much of the excitement about this approach, and second-
generation CARs in particular, is due to the dramatic clinical results recently reported by a
few centers, especially in acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and the applicability of this
approach, in principle, to a wide range of cancers. Extending the use of CAR therapies to
cancers other than B-cell malignancies will require selective tumor targeting with minimal or …
Abstract
T-cell therapies using engineered T cells show great promise for cancer immunotherapy, as illustrated by the CD19 paradigm. Much of the excitement about this approach, and second-generation CARs in particular, is due to the dramatic clinical results recently reported by a few centers, especially in acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and the applicability of this approach, in principle, to a wide range of cancers. Extending the use of CAR therapies to cancers other than B-cell malignancies will require selective tumor targeting with minimal or acceptable “on-target, off-tumor” effects. The identification of new CAR target antigens is thus one of the next big challenges to address. Recognizing the paucity of currently available tumor-specific targets, we have developed broadly applicable approaches to enhance the tumor selectivity and safety of engineered T cells. Here, we review 2 promising concepts. One is to improve tumor targeting based on combinatorial antigen recognition. The other uses receptors that provide antigen-specific inhibition, which we named iCARs, to divert T cells from the normal tissues one wants to protect.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins