Posoleucel in Kidney Transplant Recipients with BK Viremia: Multicenter, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Phase 2 Trial.

Anil Chandraker, Anil Regmi,Reginald Gohh, Akhil Sharma, E Steve Woodle, Mohammed J Ansari,Vinay Nair, Ling-Xin Chen, Tarek Alhamad,Silas Norman, Diane Cibrik, Manpreet Singh, Arnold Alper, Divya Jain,Ziad Zaky, Stuart Knechtle, Asif Sharfuddin,Gaurav Gupta, Bonnie E Lonze, Jo-Anne H Young,Deborah Adey, Arman Faravardeh,Darshana M Dadhania,Ana P Rossi, Diana Florescu,Francesca Cardarelli, Julie Ma, Sarah Gilmore,Spyridoula Vasileiou, Peter T Jindra,David Wojciechowski

Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN(2024)

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摘要
Background Kidney transplant recipients with BK virus infection are at risk of developing BK virus-associated nephropathy, allograft rejection, and subsequent graft loss. There are no approved treatments for BK virus infection. Posoleucel is an off-the-shelf, allogeneic, multivirus-specific T-cell investigational therapy targeting BK virus, as well as five other opportunistic viruses: adenovirus, cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, human herpesvirus 6, and John Cunningham virus. Methods In this phase 2, double-blind study, kidney transplant recipients with BK viremia were randomized 1:1:1 to receive posoleucel weekly for 3 weeks and then every 14 days (bi-weekly dosing) or every 28 days (monthly dosing) or placebo for 12 weeks. Participants were followed for 12 weeks after completing treatment. The primary objective was safety; the secondary objective was plasma BK viral load reduction. Results Sixty-one participants were randomized and dosed. Baseline characteristics were similar across groups. No deaths, graft-versus-host disease, or cytokine release syndrome occurred. The proportion of patients who had adverse events (AEs) judged by the investigators to be treatment-related was slightly lower in recipients of posoleucel: 20% (4 of 20 patients) and 18% (4 of 22) in those infused on a bi-weekly and monthly schedule, respectively, and 26% (5 of 19) in placebo recipients. None of the grade 3-4 AEs or serious AEs in any group were deemed treatment-related. No deaths, graft-versus-host disease, or cytokine release syndrome occurred. Three participants had allograft rejection, but none were deemed treatment-related by investigators. In posoleucel recipients, BK viremia reduction was associated with an increase in the circulating frequency of BK virus-specific T cells, and the presence and persistence of posoleucel was confirmed by T-cell receptor sequencing. Conclusions Posoleucel was generally safe, well tolerated, and associated with a larger reduction of BK viremia compared with placebo. Limitations of this study include the relatively short duration of follow-up and lack of power to detect significant differences in clinical outcomes.
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