Toxicities and Response Rates of Secondary CNS Lymphoma After Adoptive Immunotherapy With CD19-Directed Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells

Background and Objectives Secondary CNS involvement in systemic B-cell lymphoma (SCNSL) is difficult to treat and displays dismal clinical outcomes. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells emerged as a powerful treatment for systemic lymphoma. We aimed to evaluate whether CAR T cells also represent a safe and effective therapy for SCNSL. Methods We retrospectively searched our institutional database for patients with SCNSL treated with CD19-directed CAR T cells. Results We identified 10 cases, including 7 patients with intraparenchymal lesions and 3 patients with leptomeningeal disease. CNS staging at 1 month after CAR T-cell transfusion showed disease response (stable disease, partial response, and complete response) in 7 patients (70%), including 2 cases of long-lasting complete response (20%). One patient developed pseudoprogression, which resolved under steroids. Response of CNS disease was associated with systemic 1-month response. With a median follow-up of 6 months, median overall and systemic progression-free survival was 7 and 3 months, respectively. Neurotoxic symptoms occurred in 6 patients, with 3 patients developing severe neurotoxicity (American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy grade ≥3). Discussion CAR T cells induce considerable antitumor effects in SCNSL, and CNS response reflects systemic response. Neurotoxicity appears similar to previous reports on patients with lymphoma without CNS involvement. CAR T cells may therefore represent an effective and safe therapy for SCNSL.