Anti-BCMA-CAR-IL15 natural killer cells prevent multiple myeloma growth in the bone marrow but allow subsequent emergence of extramedullary disease
- Authors
- Kaczmarek, Shelby; Jo, Donghyeon; Ghaziasgar, Safa; Marr, Bryan; Berton, Stefania; Wang, Lisheng; Ghahroudi, Mehdi Arbabi; Jang, Mihue; Visram, Alissa; Mccomb, Scott; Lee, Seung-Hwan
- Issue Date
- 2026-02
- Publisher
- Elsevier BV
- Citation
- Cancer Letters, v.639
- Abstract
- Multiple myeloma (MM) is an aggressive blood cancer arising from plasma cells. B cell maturation antigen (BCMA)-directed chimeric antigen receptor T cell (α-BCMA-CAR-T) immunotherapies currently provide life-saving treatment for MM patients. Unfortunately, the high cost and manufacturing complexity of autologous CAR-T therapy remain important limitations. Novel research is underway to use CAR-expressing natural killer (NK) cells as an allogeneic CAR-T alternative, but studies have yet to evaluate long-term CAR-NK efficacy against MM. In this study, NK cells were isolated, expanded via feeder-cell stimulation, and engineered to express α-BCMA-CAR with or without human IL-15 co-expression using lentiviral vectors. In a xenograft model, both α-BCMA-CAR and IL-15 expression were required for persistent restriction of MM growth in the blood and bone marrow. Despite near complete and sustained elimination of MM in the bone marrow, long-term assessment of mice treated with α-BCMA-CAR-IL15 NK cells revealed the emergence of extramedullary disease (EMD) in the form of BCMA-positive MM plasmacytomas. This study showcases α-BCMA-CAR-IL15 NK cell therapy as a potent anti-MM therapeutic, achieving sustained MM elimination from the bone marrow and greatly extending survival. However, α-BCMA-CAR-IL15 NK cells appeared ineffective at eliminating extramedullary disease. By demonstrating the strengths and weaknesses of α-BCMA-CAR-IL15 cells, we hope this study could help direct the use of such therapies in clinical trials and provide a valuable pre-clinical MM model for studying and developing interventions for aggressive MM-EMD.
- Keywords
- ANTIBODY; THERAPY; ANTIGEN; BCMA; SURVIVAL; BCMA-CAR; Extramedullary disease; Plasmacytomas; Multiple myeloma; Chimeric antigen receptor; Natural killer cells
- ISSN
- 0304-3835
- URI
- https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/154068
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.canlet.2025.218235
- Appears in Collections:
- KIST Article > 2026
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