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FDA Grants Breakthrough Therapy Designation to Treatment for Rare Blood Cancers

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Illustration of CAR T cells

Recognition follows strong early clinical results for a novel off-the-shelf CAR T therapy targeting rare and aggressive T-cell malignancies

 

A novel off-the-shelf CAR T-cell therapy pioneered at Siteman Cancer Center at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and WashU Medicine is gaining national recognition after delivering striking clinical results in patients with rare and aggressive blood cancers.

The FDA has granted Breakthrough Therapy Designation to WU-CART-007, an allogeneic anti-CD7 CAR T-cell therapy developed by WashU Medicine researchers. In early global trials, 73% of adults and adolescents with relapsed or refractory (R/R) T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia or T cell lymphoblastic lymphoma (T-ALL/LBL) achieved full remission following treatment — an outcome that positions the therapy as a potential gamechanger in T-cell malignancies.

“Relapsed T-cell leukemias and lymphomas represent one of the most challenging areas in hematologic oncology,” said oncologist John DiPersio, MD, PhD, director of the Center for Gene and Cellular Immunotherapy at WashU Medicine and an internationally recognized cell therapy leader at Siteman Cancer Center. “We are leading transformative advances for patients with these rare and aggressive cancers. Developing an off-the-shelf CAR T platform that can induce high remission rates in this population reflects the translational depth and cellular therapy infrastructure we’ve built at Siteman.”

DiPersio and Matthew Cooper, PhD, developed the therapy — manufactured using an off-the-shelf approach from healthy donors — to target CD7+ malignancies. The two founded the biotech company Wugen in 2018 to advance the research. Further clinical trials are underway in the U.S., Europe, Asia and Australia, including at Siteman Cancer Center and Siteman Kids at St. Louis Children’s Hospital.

In reviewing results from earlier clinical trials in children, researchers at Siteman Kids noted that WU-CART-007 (also known as soficabtagene geleucel, or sofi-cel) could be a gamechanger if the therapy continues to move almost all patients from disease-state to remission, thus enabling patients to undergo stem cell transplantation.

‘An Eco-System of Innovation and Excellence’

The rapid advance of WU-CART-007 is just the latest example of what Timothy J. Eberlein, MD, director of Siteman Cancer Center, says arises out of a robust eco-system of innovation, collaboration and excellence in cancer research at WashU Medicine.

Siteman is known internationally for its basic and translational research efforts and is one of only a few institutions to receive three prestigious Specialized Program of Research Excellence (SPORE) grants from the National Cancer Institute (NCI), for leukemia, endometrial and pancreatic cancer research. Blood Cancer United, formerly known as the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, also has awarded scientists at Siteman a Specialized Center of Research (SCOR) grant for lymphoma research. Such grants are specifically designed to accelerate promising translational research into patient care.

“We are committed to continually advancing treatments for cancer and broadening options for patients,” Eberlein said. “Toward that goal, we have initiated several home-grown clinical trials that have changed the course of treatment for many cancers. Our depth and breadth of oncology research is wide, and our expertise is the result of innovation, dedication and multidisciplinary cross-collaboration that occurs throughout our center.”

Learn more: U.S. FDA Grants to Wugen’s WU-CART-007 Breakthrough Therapy Designation