Investigator

Markku Miettinen

Senior Clinician, Head of Surgical Pathology · National Institutes of Health, Laboratorey of Pathology, Center for Cancer research

MMMarkku Miettinen
Papers(1)
Development of Highly…
Collaborators(10)
M. HoNan LiQun JiangRaffit HassanSakshi TomarAbhilash VenugopalanI. PastanJessica HongJingli ZhangManakamana Khanal
Institutions(3)
Community Clinical Re…National Cancer Insti…Henan Provincial Peop…

Papers

Development of Highly Effective Anti-Mesothelin hYP218 Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells With Increased Tumor Infiltration and Persistence for Treating Solid Tumors

Abstract Mesothelin targeting CAR T cells have limited activity in patients. In this study, we sought to determine if efficacy of anti-mesothelin CAR T cells is dependent on the mesothelin epitopes that are recognized by them. To do so, we developed hYP218 (against membrane-proximal epitope) and SS1 (against membrane-distal epitope) CAR T cells. Their efficacy was assessed in vitro using mesothelin-positive tumor cell lines and in vivo in NSG mice with mesothelin-expressing ovarian cancer (OVCAR-8), pancreatic cancer (KLM-1), and mesothelioma patient-derived (NCI-Meso63) tumor xenografts. Persistence and tumor infiltration of CAR T cells was determined using flow cytometry. hYP218 CAR T cells killed cancer cells more efficiently than SS1 CAR T cells, with a two- to fourfold lower ET50 value (effector-to-target ratio for 50% killing of tumor cells). In mice with established tumors, single intravenous administration of hYP218 CAR T cells lead to improved tumor response and survival compared with SS1 CAR T cells, with complete regression of OVCAR-8 and NCI-Meso63 tumors. Compared with SS1 CAR T cells, there was increased peripheral blood expansion, persistence, and tumor infiltration of hYP218 CAR T cells in the KLM-1 tumor model. Persistence of hYP218 CAR T cells in treated mice led to antitumor immunity when rechallenged with KLM-1 tumor cells. Our results show that hYP218 CAR T cells, targeting mesothelin epitope close to cell membrane, are very effective against mesothelin-positive tumors and are associated with increased persistence and tumor infiltration. These results support its clinical development to treat patients with mesothelin-expressing cancers.

7Works
1Papers
11Collaborators

Positions

2011–

Senior Clinician, Head of Surgical Pathology

National Institutes of Health · Laboratorey of Pathology, Center for Cancer research

1996–

Chairman

Armed Forces Institute of Pathology · Soft Tissue Pathology

1988–

Assistant/Associate/Professor, Attending Pathologist

Thomas Jefferson University · Pathology, anatomy, and Cell Biology

1982–

Assistant professor

University of Helsinki · Pathology

Education

1977

MD

University of Helsinki Medical School

Links & IDs
0000-0002-3282-8107

Scopus: 56783777400