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…
Institutions(1)
Community Clinical Re…

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

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