ASH: With PhIII data in hand, Atara eyes a submission to treat a small but desperate group of transplant patients

Pascal Touchon, Atara CEO

Af­ter more than two decades in the clin­ic, Atara Bio­ther­a­peu­tics’ T cell ther­a­py tab­ele­cleu­cel is fi­nal­ly head­ed to the FDA — but not with­out a piv­otal read­out at this year’s ASH con­fer­ence.

About half of pa­tients re­spond­ed to tab-cel, Atara’s can­di­date for Ep­stein-Barr virus-pos­i­tive post-trans­plant lym­pho­pro­lif­er­a­tive dis­ease (EBV+ PTLD), a rare com­pli­ca­tion that can oc­cur af­ter sol­id or­gan or hematopoi­et­ic stem cell trans­plant.

Pa­tients who un­der­go a SOT or HCT are treat­ed with drugs that sup­press the im­mune sys­tem’s ac­tiv­i­ty in or­der to avoid re­jec­tion of the trans­plant. How­ev­er, im­muno­sup­pres­sive ther­a­py leaves them at risk of in­fec­tions like the Ep­stein-Barr virus, a com­mon virus that typ­i­cal­ly doesn’t cause any is­sues in those with healthy im­mune sys­tems. In some PTLD cas­es, ab­nor­mal white blood cells grow­ing out of con­trol can be­come in­fect­ed with the Ep­stein-Barr virus.

It’s a small but des­per­ate group of pa­tients who con­tract EBV+ PTLD. While there are just sev­er­al hun­dred new cas­es each year, HCT pa­tients have a me­di­an sur­vival of less than a month, and SOT pa­tients live a me­di­an of just 4.1 months. The con­di­tion is of­ten treat­ed with a com­bi­na­tion of chemother­a­py and Genen­tech and Bio­gen’s Rit­ux­an, but some pa­tients don’t re­spond, or they have a re­cur­rence.

All 38 pa­tients in Atara’s Phase III AL­LELE tri­al had failed on Rit­ux­an, chemother­a­py or both, re­ceiv­ing any­where be­tween one and five pri­or treat­ments. A to­tal of 24 were SOT trans­plant pa­tients, and 14 were HCT pa­tients.

Over­all re­sponse rate was 50% in both the SOT and HCT groups, ac­cord­ing to Atara. Just over 26% of pa­tients over­all achieved a com­plete re­sponse, and just un­der 24% reached a par­tial re­sponse.

Eleven of the 19 re­spon­ders saw a du­ra­tion of re­sponse longer than six months, Atara said. Of the eight re­main­ing re­spon­ders, four pa­tients ex­pe­ri­enced ei­ther dis­ease pro­gres­sion or death, and four weren’t evalu­able for a six-month re­sponse at the da­ta cut. There were no treat­ment-re­lat­ed deaths, ac­cord­ing to CMO AJ Joshi. Pa­tients who re­spond­ed to tab-cel sur­vived longer than the non-re­spon­ders, Joshi point­ed out — with a one-year sur­vival rate of 89.2% in the re­spon­der group ver­sus 32.4% in the group that didn’t re­spond. Me­di­an over­all sur­vival wasn’t reached in the re­spon­der group.

‘This is (a) very ag­gres­sive, rapid­ly pro­gress­ing dis­ease once they fail’ rit­ux­imab and chemother­a­py, Joshi told End­points News. ‘Some peo­ple even try such hard chemo that they need an­oth­er trans­plant. So these are very ag­gres­sive op­tions and the ma­jor­i­ty of time they don’t work.’

Tab-cel is de­signed to be an es­sen­tial­ly chemo-free op­tion, with­out the neg­a­tive side ef­fects of CAR-Ts. Its roots trace back to Richard O’Reil­ly’s lab at Memo­r­i­al Sloan Ket­ter­ing Can­cer Cen­ter. The can­di­date makes use of EBV T cells from donors, which specif­i­cal­ly tar­get EBV-in­fect­ed cells. These cells nat­u­ral­ly have a low like­li­hood to harm nor­mal tis­sues, and they’re able to per­sist in the body a long time, Atara says. Plus, there were no re­ports of side ef­fects com­mon to CAR-T ther­a­pies like graft-ver­sus-host dis­ease or cy­tokine re­lease syn­drome in the Phase III tri­al.

That’s not all Atara brought to ASH. The com­pa­ny al­so re­port­ed long-term re­sults from Phase II and EAP tri­als, show­ing a me­di­an over­all sur­vival of 54.6 months. The over­all com­plete re­sponse rate was 42.1%, and the par­tial re­sponse rate was 21.1%. Two-year sur­vival rates for CR and PR pa­tients were 86.2% and 86.5%, re­spec­tive­ly.

Atara filed with the EMA in No­vem­ber, and is ex­pect­ing a de­ci­sion in the sec­ond half of 2022. An FDA sub­mis­sion should be com­ing in the first half of next year, Joshi said.

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Li Ning, Junshi Biosciences CEO

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