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Exth-08. immunotherapeutic targeting of fibroblast activation protein (fap) in treatment refractory glioblastoma using novel car-t cell therapy

Neuro-Oncology(2023)

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Abstract
Abstract Glioblastoma (GBM), the most common malignant primary adult brain tumor, is characterized by extensive cellular and genetic heterogeneity. The standard of care therapy and clinical trials have not been successful in improving patients’ survival which underscores an urgent need for developing new effective therapies. In silico and in vitro analysis have revealed high level of Fibroblast Activation Protein (FAP) expression in GBM tissue by multiple cell populations including endothelial cells, fibroblasts, stromal and tumor cells, but not normal brain tissue, making FAP a safe and suitable therapeutic target. As chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) expressing T cells have shown promising results against multiple cancers, we aimed to target FAP in GBM by FAP specific CAR-T cells generated using a novel GMP-ready FAP-CAR construct produced based on a virus-free CAR gene transfer using advanced sleeping beauty transposon technology and pre-clinically test their anti-tumor efficacy. Our data revealed that co-culturing CAR-T cells with FAP+ GBM cells (U87) resulted in increased surface expression of T-cell activation markers. Moreover, FAP CAR-T mediated cytotoxicity against FAP+ GBM cells was also observed in the co-culture of GBM and CAR-T cells. For further validation, the effect of FAP CAR-T cells will be tested on patient-derived GBM organoids. The in vivo efficacy of FAP CAR-T cells is currently under investigation and we anticipate that the treatment of GBM tumor-bearing mice with FAP CAR-Ts results in extended survival and tumor burden reduction. These rigorously obtained data show high level of efficacy for FAP-specific CAR-T cells against GBM suggesting that clinical development of this therapeutic modality can provide a novel therapeutic strategy for GBM patients. Therefore, upon successful completion of the preclinical study, we plan to conduct a phase I dose-escalation trial of autologous FAP-CAR T cells for patients with recurrent Glioblastoma.
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