A new study led by researchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center discovered loss of metabolic fitness in chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) natural killer (NK) cells is a critical mechanism of resistance, with infused cells gradually losing the ability to compete with tumour cells for nutrients, leading to tumour relapse.
The study, published today in Science Advances, demonstrates that engineering CAR NK cells to express interleukin-15 (IL-15) enhances the cells’ metabolic fitness and provides a longer-lasting anti-tumour response.
In addition, two infusions of CAR NK cells expressing IL-15 boosted survival in comparison to a single dose.
The collaborative research was led by co-corresponding authors Ken Chen, Ph.D., professor of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, and Katy Rezvani, M.D., Ph.D., professor of Stem Cell Transplantation & Cellular Therapy, along with researchers in the Chen and Rezvani labs.
“Understanding the mechanism of resistance facilitates more focused interrogation to identify strategies by which we can mitigate or circumvent these resistance mechanisms and improve the efficacy of the CAR NK cell therapy,” Chen said.
As part of the preclinical study, researchers focused on genetically engineered NK cells with a CAR targeting the CD19 tumour antigen (CAR19).
Using laboratory models of lymphoma, they evaluated cells that expressed either CAR19 alone, IL-15 alone, or both CAR19 and IL-15 to investigate the ability of IL-15 to activate NK cells and to enhance their potency and persistence.
Researchers observed the emergence of NK cell clusters with distinct patterns of activation, function and metabolic signature associated with different phases of in vivo evolution and tumour control.
Interactions with the highly metabolically active tumour resulted in loss of metabolic fitness in NK cells that was partly overcome with the expression of IL-15.
To overcome this resistance, mice received a second infusion of CAR19/IL-15 NK cells 14 days after the first.
The second infusion increased the number of functional NK cells and resulted in long-term tumour eradication.
The relevance of the preclinical findings was confirmed in samples from two patients with lymphoid malignancies treated with CAR19/IL-15 NK cells as part of a recent clinical trial.
“Our data suggest that successful treatment using CAR NK cells may require multiple infusions in order to achieve a robust NK cell population capable of mounting a strong anti-tumour response, especially for difficult-to-treat and highly metabolically active tumours,” Rezvani said.
The increase in functional NK cells with a second infusion provides researchers with a clinically actionable strategy to improve efficacy of CAR NK cell therapy and warrants further investigation.
Researchers will continue to validate their findings in additional tumour models and study mechanisms of resistance in upcoming clinical trials with CAR NK cells targeting CD70 in solid tumours.
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