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Dive into the research topics where David E Ambrose is active.

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Featured researches published by David E Ambrose.


Science Translational Medicine | 2015

Chimeric antigen receptor T cells persist and induce sustained remissions in relapsed refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia

David L. Porter; Wei-Ting Hwang; Noelle V. Frey; Simon F. Lacey; Pamela A. Shaw; Alison W. Loren; Adam Bagg; Katherine T. Marcucci; Angela Shen; Vanessa Gonzalez; David E Ambrose; Stephan A. Grupp; Anne Chew; Zhaohui Zheng; Michael C. Milone; Bruce L. Levine; J. Joseph Melenhorst; Carl H. June

CAR T cells persist and sustain remissions in advanced chronic lymphocytic leukemia. CAR T cells for the long haul Immunotherapy is one of the most promising avenues of cancer therapy, with the potential to induce sustained remissions in patients with refractory disease. Studies with chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)–modified T cells have paved the way in patients with relapsed and refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Porter et al. now report the mature results from their initial CAR T cell trial. CAR T cell persistence correlated with clinical responses, and these cells were functional up to 4 years after treatment. No patient who achieved complete remission relapsed, and no minimal residual disease was detected, suggesting that in a subset of patients, CAR T cells may drive disease eradication. Patients with multiply relapsed or refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) have a poor prognosis. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)–modified T cells targeting CD19 have the potential to improve on the low complete response rates with conventional therapies by inducing sustained remissions in patients with refractory B cell malignancies. We previously reported preliminary results on three patients with refractory CLL. We report the mature results from our initial trial using CAR-modified T cells to treat 14 patients with relapsed and refractory CLL. Autologous T cells transduced with a CD19-directed CAR (CTL019) lentiviral vector were infused into patients with relapsed/refractory CLL at doses of 0.14 × 108 to 11 × 108 CTL019 cells (median, 1.6 × 108 cells). Patients were monitored for toxicity, response, expansion, and persistence of circulating CTL019 T cells. The overall response rate in these heavily pretreated CLL patients was 8 of 14 (57%), with 4 complete remissions (CR) and 4 partial remissions (PR). The in vivo expansion of the CAR T cells correlated with clinical responses, and the CAR T cells persisted and remained functional beyond 4 years in the first two patients achieving CR. No patient in CR has relapsed. All responding patients developed B cell aplasia and experienced cytokine release syndrome, coincident with T cell proliferation. Minimal residual disease was not detectable in patients who achieved CR, suggesting that disease eradication may be possible in some patients with advanced CLL.


Blood | 2017

PD-1 blockade modulates chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)–modified T cells: refueling the CAR

Elise Chong; J. Joseph Melenhorst; Simon F. Lacey; David E Ambrose; Gonzalez; Bruce L. Levine; Carl H. June; Stephen J. Schuster

To the editor: Antibodies blocking the programmed death 1 receptor (PD-1) on T cells produce tumor regression in multiple cancers by disrupting the PD-L1/PD-1 (programmed death-ligand 1/programmed cell death protein 1) immune inhibitory axis.[1][1][⇓][2][⇓][3][⇓][4]-[5][5] This approach to


Nature Medicine | 2018

Determinants of response and resistance to CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy of chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Joseph A. Fraietta; Simon F. Lacey; Elena Orlando; Iulian Pruteanu-Malinici; Mercy Gohil; Stefan Lundh; Alina C. Boesteanu; Yan Wang; Roddy S. O’Connor; Wei-Ting Hwang; Edward Pequignot; David E Ambrose; Changfeng Zhang; Nicholas Wilcox; Felipe Bedoya; Corin Dorfmeier; Fang Chen; Lifeng Tian; Harit Parakandi; Minnal Gupta; Regina M. Young; F. Brad Johnson; Irina Kulikovskaya; Li Liu; Jun Xu; Sadik Kassim; Megan M. Davis; Bruce L. Levine; Noelle V. Frey; Don L. Siegel

Tolerance to self-antigens prevents the elimination of cancer by the immune system1,2. We used synthetic chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) to overcome immunological tolerance and mediate tumor rejection in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Remission was induced in a subset of subjects, but most did not respond. Comprehensive assessment of patient-derived CAR T cells to identify mechanisms of therapeutic success and failure has not been explored. We performed genomic, phenotypic and functional evaluations to identify determinants of response. Transcriptomic profiling revealed that CAR T cells from complete-responding patients with CLL were enriched in memory-related genes, including IL-6/STAT3 signatures, whereas T cells from nonresponders upregulated programs involved in effector differentiation, glycolysis, exhaustion and apoptosis. Sustained remission was associated with an elevated frequency of CD27+CD45RO–CD8+ T cells before CAR T cell generation, and these lymphocytes possessed memory-like characteristics. Highly functional CAR T cells from patients produced STAT3-related cytokines, and serum IL-6 correlated with CAR T cell expansion. IL-6/STAT3 blockade diminished CAR T cell proliferation. Furthermore, a mechanistically relevant population of CD27+PD-1–CD8+ CAR T cells expressing high levels of the IL-6 receptor predicts therapeutic response and is responsible for tumor control. These findings uncover new features of CAR T cell biology and underscore the potential of using pretreatment biomarkers of response to advance immunotherapies.An IL-6/STAT3 signature and memory CD8 T cell subset in preinfusion chimeric antigen receptor–expressing T cells associate with response in patients with high-risk chronic lymphocytic leukemia.


Nature | 2018

Disruption of TET2 promotes the therapeutic efficacy of CD19-targeted T cells

Joseph A. Fraietta; Christopher L. Nobles; Morgan A. Sammons; Stefan Lundh; Shannon A. Carty; Tyler J. Reich; Alexandria P. Cogdill; Jennifer J.D. Morrissette; Jamie E. DeNizio; Shantan Reddy; Young Hwang; Mercy Gohil; Irina Kulikovskaya; Farzana Nazimuddin; Minnal Gupta; Fang Chen; John K. Everett; Katherine A. Alexander; Enrique Lin-Shiao; Marvin H. Gee; Xiaojun Liu; Regina M. Young; David E Ambrose; Yan Wang; Jun Xu; Martha S. Jordan; Katherine T. Marcucci; Bruce L. Levine; K. Christopher Garcia; Yangbing Zhao

Cancer immunotherapy based on genetically redirecting T cells has been used successfully to treat B cell malignancies1–3. In this strategy, the T cell genome is modified by integration of viral vectors or transposons encoding chimaeric antigen receptors (CARs) that direct tumour cell killing. However, this approach is often limited by the extent of expansion and persistence of CAR T cells4,5. Here we report mechanistic insights from studies of a patient with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia treated with CAR T cells targeting the CD19 protein. Following infusion of CAR T cells, anti-tumour activity was evident in the peripheral blood, lymph nodes and bone marrow; this activity was accompanied by complete remission. Unexpectedly, at the peak of the response, 94% of CAR T cells originated from a single clone in which lentiviral vector-mediated insertion of the CAR transgene disrupted the methylcytosine dioxygenase TET2 gene. Further analysis revealed a hypomorphic mutation in this patient’s second TET2 allele. TET2-disrupted CAR T cells exhibited an epigenetic profile consistent with altered T cell differentiation and, at the peak of expansion, displayed a central memory phenotype. Experimental knockdown of TET2 recapitulated the potency-enhancing effect of TET2 dysfunction in this patient’s CAR T cells. These findings suggest that the progeny of a single CAR T cell induced leukaemia remission and that TET2 modification may be useful for improving immunotherapies.Genetically engineered T cells that induced remission in a patient with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia were found to have disruption of the TET2 gene, which caused T cell changes that potentiated their anti-tumour effects.


Nature Medicine | 2018

Induction of resistance to chimeric antigen receptor T cell therapy by transduction of a single leukemic B cell.

Marco Ruella; Jun Xu; David M. Barrett; Joseph A. Fraietta; Tyler J. Reich; David E Ambrose; Michael Klichinsky; Olga Shestova; Prachi R. Patel; Irina Kulikovskaya; Farzana Nazimuddin; Vijay Bhoj; Elena Orlando; Terry J. Fry; Hans Bitter; Shannon L. Maude; Bruce L. Levine; Christopher L. Nobles; Frederic D. Bushman; Regina M. Young; John Scholler; Saar Gill; Carl H. June; Stephan A. Grupp; Simon F. Lacey; J. Joseph Melenhorst

We report a patient relapsing 9 months after CD19-targeted CAR T cell (CTL019) infusion with CD19– leukemia that aberrantly expressed the anti-CD19 CAR. The CAR gene was unintentionally introduced into a single leukemic B cell during T cell manufacturing, and its product bound in cis to the CD19 epitope on the surface of leukemic cells, masking it from recognition by and conferring resistance to CTL019.A CAR gene unintentionally introduced in a contaminating leukemia cell during the manufacturing of CAR T cells caused a patient to relapse after therapy.


Blood | 2016

B-Cell Maturation Antigen (BCMA)-Specific Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells (CART-BCMA) for Multiple Myeloma (MM): Initial Safety and Efficacy from a Phase I Study

Adam D. Cohen; Alfred L. Garfall; Edward A. Stadtmauer; Simon F. Lacey; Eric Lancaster; Dan T. Vogl; Karen Dengel; David E Ambrose; Fang Chen; Gabriela Plesa; Irina Kulikovskaya; Vanessa Gonzalez; Minnal Gupta; Regina M. Young; Tenesia Carey; Regina Ferthio; Brendan M. Weiss; Celeste Richardson; Randi Isaacs; J. Joseph Melenhorst; Bruce L. Levine; Carl H. June; Michael C. Milone


Blood | 2016

Pilot Study of Anti-CD19 Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells (CTL019) in Conjunction with Salvage Autologous Stem Cell Transplantation for Advanced Multiple Myeloma

Alfred L. Garfall; Edward A. Stadtmauer; Marcela V. Maus; Wei-Ting Hwang; Dan T. Vogl; Adam D. Cohen; Brendan M. Weiss; David L. Porter; Noelle Frey; Michael C. Milone; Patricia A. Mangan; Maria Krevvata; Emily Case Ayers; Karen Dengel; Naseem Kerr; Simon F. Lacey; J. Joseph Melenhorst; David E Ambrose; Fang Chen; Vanessa Gonzalez; Irina Kulikovskaya; Minnal Gupta; Jeffrey Finklestein; Anne Lamontagne; Matthew O'Rourke; Megan M. Suhoski Davis; Alexander Malykhin; Bruce L. Levine; Carl H. June


Blood | 2017

Safety and Efficacy of B-Cell Maturation Antigen (BCMA)-Specific Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells (CART-BCMA) with Cyclophosphamide Conditioning for Refractory Multiple Myeloma (MM)

Adam D. Cohen; Alfred L. Garfall; Edward A. Stadtmauer; Simon F. Lacey; Eric Lancaster; Dan T. Vogl; Brendan M. Weiss; David E Ambrose; Anne Marie Nelson; Fang Chen; Gabriela Plesa; Irina Kulikovskaya; Vanessa Gonzalez; Minnal Gupta; Regina M. Young; Karen Dengel; Laura O'Keefe; Samantha Le; Celeste Richardson; Randi Isaacs; J. Joseph Melenhorst; Bruce L. Levine; Carl H. June; Michael C. Milone


Blood | 2013

Long-Term Functional Persistence, B Cell Aplasia and Anti-Leukemia Efficacy In Refractory B Cell Malignancies Following T Cell Immunotherapy Using CAR-Redirected T Cells Targeting CD19

Farzana Nazimuddin; Jeffrey Finklestein; Minnal Gupta; Irina Kulikovskaya; David E Ambrose; Saar Gill; Simon F. Lacey; Zhaohui Zheng; J. Joseph Melenhorst; Bruce L. Levine; Noelle Frey; Stephan A. Grupp; David L. Porter; Carl H. June


Blood | 2016

Cars in Leukemia: Relapse with Antigen-Negative Leukemia Originating from a Single B Cell Expressing the Leukemia-Targeting CAR

Simon F. Lacey; Jun Xu; Marco Ruella; David M. Barrett; Irina Kulikovskaya; David E Ambrose; Prachi R. Patel; Tyler J. Reich; John Scholler; Farzana Nazimuddin; Joseph A. Fraietta; Shannon L. Maude; Saar Gill; Bruce L. Levine; Christopher L. Nobles; Frederic D. Bushman; Elena Orlando; Stephan A. Grupp; Carl H. June; J. Joseph Melenhorst

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Bruce L. Levine

University of Pennsylvania

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Simon F. Lacey

University of Pennsylvania

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Carl H. June

University of Pennsylvania

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Fang Chen

University of Pennsylvania

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Minnal Gupta

University of Pennsylvania

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Regina M. Young

University of Pennsylvania

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David L. Porter

University of Pennsylvania

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