Abstract

BACKGROUNDEpendymoma is the third most common pediatric brain tumor and current treatment still results in a 10-year relapse rate of over 70% in the highest risk groups. The treatment refractory nature of ependymoma to standard therapies strongly supports the development of novel interventions. Ependymoma tumor cells express HER2 and there are active clinical trials treating children with ependymoma using local delivery of second-generation HER2 CAR T cells.METHODSTwo high-risk patient-derived ependymoma cell lines, MAF811 and MAF928, that display HER2 surface expression are used for testing. We tested second-generation HER2-BBz CAR T cells in vitro and in vivo.RESULTSHER2 CAR T cells effectively kill ependymoma tumor cells in culture, but this strategy cannot eradicate the same tumor cells in mice when implanted in the fourth ventricle of the brain. HER2 CAR T cells proliferate and traffic into the tumor, but this causes a dramatic influx of immune cells, tumor swelling and lethal toxicity in a subset of mice. Mice that survive this initial tumor swelling, display significant tumor shrinkage but all tumors eventually start growing again. Ependymoma tumor cells release high amounts of inflammatory chemokines that strongly attract neutrophils and monocytes to the tumor, compared to other brain tumors, and can downregulate HER2 expression to escape recognition by CAR T cells.CONCLUSIONThe immunosuppressive microenvironment as well as tumor heterogeneity make HER2 CAR T cells ineffective in ependymoma. Studying these two hurdles in CAR T cell therapy is critical to effectively treat brain tumors with CAR T cells.

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