Abstract

Adoptive cellular therapies have revolutionized the management of hematologic malignancies, particularly lymphoma and multiple myeloma. These therapies targeting disease-specific antigens, such as CD19 in lymphoma and B cell maturation antigen in multiple myeloma, are efficacious and well-tolerated compared with conventional chemotherapies. Unfortunately, their potential remains unrealized in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). This is because most targetable antigens on AML cells are also expressed on healthy myeloid hematopoietic stem cells (HSC). Therefore, targeting them results in severe myeloablative effects and pancytopenia. Several strategies have been devised to overcome this barrier, including identifying AML-specific antigens, limiting CAR-T cell persistence to prevent prolonged myeloablation, and creating AML-specific antigens through manipulating HSCs prior to allogenic transplant. In this review, we discuss these strategies and the ongoing clinical trials on adoptive cellular therapies in AML, limiting our focus to chimeric antigen receptor-T cells (CAR-T) and chimeric antigen receptor-natural killer cells (CAR-NK).

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