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Ground-breaking therapy comes with distinct challenges

“A provocative question is whether CAR T-cell therapy can actually replace autologous stem cell transplant as second-line therapy,” she said.  “This is actually being actively evaluated in a number of clinical trials including ZUMA-7 (NCT03391466).”

“I think another provocative question is whether CAR T-cell therapy can be used as consolidation in CR1 [first complete remission],” she added.

The rationale for using CAR Ts as either a replacement for autologous stem cell transplant or in CR1 is that there may be minimal residual disease present that would be enough to elicit a CAR T-cell effect, she explained.

“Ultimately, one envisions the following paradigm for the treatment of lymphomas across the board,” Dr. Karmali concluded.

“Specifically, chemotherapy with a targeted agent for rapid cytoreduction, followed by CAR T-cell consolidation in combination with either other cellular therapies or immunotherapy as a means of eradicating the minimal residual disease and ensuring a pathway to cure.”