KITE-363: An Autologous Anti-CD19/CD20 CAR-T Product for the Treatment of Neuroinflammatory Autoimmune Diseases
Christine Lowe1, Brian Kim1, Francisco Flores1, Jeremy Margaitis1, Alessandro Calo1, Anna Konecny1, Eva Jaghatspanyan1, Sean Yoder1, Kenneth Ertel1, Simone Filosto1, Jodi Murakami1, David Barrett1
1Kite Pharma
Objective:

This preclinical study evaluated KITE-363, a dual-targeting anti-CD19/CD20 CAR T-cell therapy in patients with myasthenia gravis (MG) or multiple sclerosis (MS). 

Background:

B-cells drive pathogenesis of neuroinflammatory autoimmune diseases through several key mechanisms. B-cell depleting agents, including chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells, have demonstrated potential for reestablishing immune tolerance and achieving rapid, durable remission. Dual-targeting of CD19 and CD20, variably expressed during B-cell maturation, may enhance efficacy over single-antigen approaches. Moreover, eliminating potentially pathogenic CD20+ T-cells and NK-cells may offer additional therapeutic benefits in autoimmune diseases. KITE-363 is an anti-CD19/CD20 CAR T-cell therapy incorporating both CD28 and 41BB costimulatory domains and is currently in Phase 1 clinical trials for relapsed/refractory B-cell lymphoma (NCT04989803) and refractory rheumatic autoimmune diseases (NCT07038447).

Design/Methods:

CD19 and CD20 expression on B-cells and T-cells from patients with MG or MS was analyzed by flow cytometry. Patient-derived anti-CD19/CD20 CAR T-cell products (KITE-363) were generated using a bicistronic lentiviral vector encoding anti-CD19 CAR (FMC63-CD28ζ) and anti-CD20 CAR (CD20-41BBζ). Immunophenotyping and in vitro functional assessments were performed.

Results:

In patients with MG or MS, most B-cells variably expressed both antigens (CD19+CD20+). Single-antigen positive CD19+CD20 plasmablasts, CD19CD20+ double negative (IgDCD27) B-cells, CD20+ T-cells, and NK-cells were also detected. Patient-derived KITE-363 products exhibited high expression of both CARs. Antigen-specific functionality was demonstrated through cytokine secretion, proliferation, and cytotoxicity against CD19+ and/or CD20+ cell lines, autologous B-cells, and T-cells.

Conclusions:

Highly variable CD19 and CD20 expression on B-cell subsets and potent antigen-specific depletion of B-cells and CD20+ T-cells provide robust evidence for clinical development of KITE-363 in B-cell-mediated neuroinflammatory diseases. KITE-363 aims to comprehensively eliminate pathogenic B-cells and other immune cells with dual-antigen CD19/CD20 targeting and optimized co-stimulation to achieve durable, drug-free remission. A Phase 1 study is underway to evaluate the safety and efficacy of KITE-363 in refractory autoimmune neuroinflammatory diseases.

10.1212/WNL.0000000000213083
Disclaimer: Abstracts were not reviewed by Neurology® and do not reflect the views of Neurology® editors or staff.