Sustained B cell depletion by CD19-targeted CAR T cells is a highly effective treatment for murine lupus

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Abstract

The failure of anti-CD20 antibody (Rituximab) as therapy for lupus may be attributed to the transient and incomplete B cell depletion achieved in clinical trials. Here, using an alternative approach, we report that complete and sustained CD19 + B cell depletion is a highly effective therapy in lupus models. CD8 + T cells expressing CD19-targeted chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) persistently depleted CD19 + B cells, eliminated autoantibody production, reversed disease manifestations in target organs, and extended life spans well beyond normal in the (NZB × NZW) F 1 and MRL fas/fas mouse models of lupus. CAR T cells were active for 1 year in vivo and were enriched in the CD44 + CD62L + T cell subset. Adoptively transferred splenic T cells from CAR T cell–treated mice depleted CD19 + B cells and reduced disease in naive autoimmune mice, indicating that disease control was cell-mediated. Sustained B cell depletion with CD19-targeted CAR T cell immunotherapy is a stable and effective strategy to treat murine lupus, and its effectiveness should be explored in clinical trials for lupus.

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Kansal, R., Richardson, N., Neeli, I., Khawaja, S., Chamberlain, D., Ghani, M., … Radic, M. (2019). Sustained B cell depletion by CD19-targeted CAR T cells is a highly effective treatment for murine lupus. Science Translational Medicine, 11(482). https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.aav1648

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