
Faculty, Staff and Student Publications
Publication Date
8-1-2023
Journal
Melanoma Research
Abstract
There is no currently approved adoptive cellular therapy for solid tumors. Pre-clinical and clinical studies have demonstrated that low-dose radiotherapy (LDRT) can enhance intratumoral T cell infiltration and efficacy. This case report describes a 71-year-old female patient with rectal mucosal melanoma that had developed metastases to liver, lung, mediastinum, axillary nodes, and brain. After systemic therapies had failed, she enrolled in the radiation sub-study of our phase-I clinical trial exploring the safety and efficacy of afamitresgene autoleucel (afami-cel), genetically engineered T cells with a T cell receptor (TCR) targeting the MAGE-A4 tumor antigen in patients with advanced malignancies (NCT03132922). Prior to the infusion of afami-cel, she received concurrent lymphodepleting chemotherapy and LDRT at 5.6 Gy/4 fractions to the liver. Time to partial response was 10 weeks, and duration of overall response was 18.4 weeks. Although the patient progressed at 28 weeks, the disease was well controlled after high-dose radiotherapy to liver metastases and checkpoint inhibitors. As of the last follow-up, she remains alive over two years after LDRT and afami-cel therapy. This report suggests that afami-cel in combination with LDRT safely enhanced clinical benefit. This provides evidence for further exploring the benefit of LDRT in TCR-T cell therapy.
Keywords
Female, Humans, Aged, Melanoma, HLA-A2 Antigen, Immunotherapy, Adoptive, Skin Neoplasms, Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, Cell- and Tissue-Based Therapy
DOI
10.1097/CMR.0000000000000869
PMID
37325860
PMCID
PMC10309102
PubMedCentral® Posted Date
6-16-2023
PubMedCentral® Full Text Version
Post-print
Published Open-Access
yes
Included in
Bioinformatics Commons, Biomedical Informatics Commons, Genetic Phenomena Commons, Medical Genetics Commons, Oncology Commons