Prognostic significance of PET/CT for CAR T cell therapy in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Patrick Born - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • David Fandrei - , Fraunhofer Institute for Cell Therapy and Immunology, Leipzig University (Author)
  • Song Yau Wang - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Carmen Perez-Fernandez - , University Hospital Leipzig (Author)
  • Luise Fischer - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Jule Ussmann - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Enrica Bach - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Sandra Hoffmann - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • K.H. Metzeler - (Author)
  • Marco Herling - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Carmen Diana Herling - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Madlen Jentzsch - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Andreas Boldt - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Sabine Seiffert - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Ronny Baber - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Heike Weidner - , Department of Internal Medicine III, University Centre for Healthy Ageing (Author)
  • Georg Nikolaus Franke - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Timm Denecke - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Osama Sabri - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Uwe Platzbecker - , University Hospital Leipzig (Author)
  • Vladan Vucinic - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Hans Jonas Meyer - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Lars Kurch - , Leipzig University (Author)
  • Maximilian Merz - , Leipzig University, Fraunhofer Institute for Cell Therapy and Immunology, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (Author)

Abstract

PET/CT plays an important role in staging of multiple myeloma (MM) and detecting extramedullary disease (EMD); however, its role in patients treated with commercially available CAR T cell therapies is unclear. We evaluated 61 patients treated with CAR T cell products. In 53 patients, PET/CT was available before CAR T infusion, and 43 had follow-up PET/CT on day 30. Findings from PET/CT were correlated to (CAR) T single-cell dynamics, fitness and T cell receptor diversity after infusion, and serological markers of tumor burden and inflammation. Patients with bone-independent EMD had inferior median progression-free survival (PFS: 3 vs. 15 months, p = 0.01). Univariate and multivariate analysis showed that EMD but not the number of lesions or metabolic tumor volume (MTV) were associated with inferior PFS. High MTV was connected to higher baseline sBCMA and Interleukin-6 levels, but not associated with hampered CAR T cell expansion or decreased fitness of the bystander T cell compartment. Follow-up PET/CTs identified patients with metabolic complete remissions, which were associated with better PFS. PET/CT identifies patients with high risk of relapse after CAR T cell therapy.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70159
JournalHemaSphere
Volume9
Issue number6
Publication statusPublished - 15 Jun 2025
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 105008221042
ORCID /0009-0001-6045-3349/work/217239070

Keywords