Focus oncology development on the patient, manage trial complexity, and increase predictability and speed.
Last August, in a milestone decades in the making, Kymriah became the first cell therapy to be approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The approval was based on a groundbreaking clinical study that showed the drug could wipe out the blood cancer in people who had already gone through many unsuccessful rounds of traditional therapy. Just three months after receiving Kymriah, 83 percent of these patients were in complete remission.
Kymriah was the first success story for a new kind of treatment called chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy, or CAR-T therapy. These remarkable results set off a frenzy in the biotech world: The same month that Kymriah was approved, Gilead Sciences agreed to pay $11.9 billion for Kite Pharma, which subsequently received FDA approval for its own CAR-T therapy, Yescarta. Later, Celgene paid $9 billion to acquire Juno Therapeutics, a biopharmaceutical company founded in 2013 through a collaboration of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and pediatrics partner Seattle Children's Research Institute, that doesn’t yet have an FDA-approved therapy.
Unlike conventional drugs that are manufactured in bulk, Kymriah and Yescarta must be made new for every patient. The process starts by removing a person’s T cells, inserting a gene for a synthetic protein called a chimeric antigen receptor, then reinfusing it into the patient to spot and destroy tumors.
Despite all of the excitement generated by these results, there are still significant limitations to CAR-T cell technology. Kymriah and Yescarta treat only people with rare blood cancers. And personalizing medicine comes at a price: A one-time injection of Kymriah costs $475,000. Add the related hospital care and the overall cost of CAR-T therapy can approach $1 million. Health insurers are still grappling with how to pay for that. Although it’s early in Kymriah’s adoption, the therapy brought in only $12 million in sales last quarter.
One of the other issues with CAR-T cells is that they can produce severe systemic inflammation (cytokine release syndrome or CRS) as well as neurologic toxicities, which can be difficult to treat. These toxicities have been responsible for the death of more than a dozen people in clinical trials. Tocilizumab, an anti-IL6 antibody, which was approved for the treatment of several autoimmune diseases has been successful at reducing some of the symptoms of CRS, and has made CAR-T therapy somewhat safer, but it has only modest impact on overall neurological dysfunction. Because of the price, as well as risk of toxicities, CAR-T cell therapy is reserved as a last resort for patients with no other options.
Successful applications of CAR-T therapy have also been more elusive for more common solid tumors, such as lung, colorectal and breast cancer. Solid tumors release a slew of molecules to suppress the immune system and shield themselves from T-cell attack.
The lack of CAR-T efficacy in solid tumors can be due to the environmental barriers that exist (e.g., endothelial cell dysfunction, extracellular matrix barriers, or lack of nutrients,) which prevent migration and infiltration to physically access the tumor. Many tumors also have chronic inflammation with immunosuppressive molecules that express immune checkpoint inhibitor ligands, inducing strong immunosuppression within the tumor microenvironment.
To improve CAR-T function in solid tumors, it is important to focus on improving tumor targeting; defining optimal CAR structures and signaling domains; and synergizing CAR-T cells with the pro-immune and anti-tumor effects of oncolytic viruses, checkpoint inhibitors, and cytokine delivery.
There are a growing number of biotech companies devising control systems to make new CAR-T therapies simultaneously safer and more powerful.
Focus oncology development on the patient, manage trial complexity, and increase predictability and speed.
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