Prior Use of Novel Agents Does Not Affect alloHCT Outcomes in CLL – Cancer Therapy Advisor

The number of prior novel agents administered or their use immediately prior to allogeneic hemopoietic stem cell transplant (alloHCT) for the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) was not associated with outcomes, according to results of a retrospective study published in Blood Advances.1

Novel agents such as BCR, BTK, PI3K, and BCL2 inhibitors have generally improved outcomes among patients with CLL, but a subset of patients experience disease progression, resistance, high-grade transformation, or drug intolerance and require additional curative modalities.

Understanding outcomes for potentially curative modalities including alloHCT following novel agent therapy is critical while devising treatment sequences aimed at long-term disease control, the authors wrote.

This multicenter, retrospective cohort study included 65 patients with CLL who underwent alloHCT. All patients had received at least 1 novel agent prior to their transplant. Patient-related and disease-related characteristics were assessed, as well as prior treatment and transplant characteristics.

At baseline, the median patient age was 50 years at CLL diagnosis and 60 years at alloHCT. The HCT-comorbidity index (CI) was 0 among 38% of patients, 1-2 among 37%, and 3 among 25%. The majority of patients received a reduced-intensity conditioning regimen and a calcineurin inhibitor with methotrexate as graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis. The median number of previous lines of therapy was 3, with a median of 1 prior novel agent.

At 24 months, the progression-free survival (PFS) was 63% and overall survival (OS) was 81%. Nonrelapse mortality was 13% and relapse occurred among 27% of patients.

The number of novel agents used prior to transplant and the timing of their use was not associated with PFS or OS. In univariate analyses, there was no association between PFS and prior use of ibrutinib, venetoclax, PI3K inhibitors, 2 novel agents, or novel agent use immediately before alloHCT. Results were similar for OS.

Poor-risk characteristics, complete versus partial remission, and transplant characteristics were also not associated with PFS after transplant.

Multivariate analysis, however, demonstrated that HCT-CI 1 was significantly associated with PFS (hazard ratio, 3.3; 95% CI, 1.1-9.9; P =.035).

The authors concluded that prior novel agents do not appear to impact the safety of alloHCT, and survival outcomes are similar regardless of number of novel agents received, prior chemoimmunotherapy exposure, or novel agent immediately preceding alloHCT.

Reference

Roeker LE, Dreger P, Brown JR, et al. Allogeneic stem cell transplantation for chronic lymphocytic leukemia in the era of novel agents. Blood Adv. 2020;4:3977-3989. doi:10.1182/bloodadvances.2020001956

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Prior Use of Novel Agents Does Not Affect alloHCT Outcomes in CLL - Cancer Therapy Advisor

COVID-19 cell therapy drives Mesoblast to seek manufacturing muscle – BioPharma-Reporter.com

In mid-August, the US Food and Drug Administrations (FDA) Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee voiced support for the efficacy of remestemcel-L in children with steroid-resistant graft-versus-host (GvHD) disease. The positive vote moved Mesoblast a step closer to winning approval for the mesenchymal stem cell therapy.

While seeking approval in that long-targeted indication, Mesoblast is also working to show the cell therapy is effective in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) caused by infection with SARS-CoV-2.

Talking to investors on a fourth quarter results conference call late last week, Mesoblast CEO Silviu Itescu explained how the potential size of the COVID-19 market opportunity creates a substantial challenge.

We ... have to be prepared to substantially scale up manufacturing ... to be in a position next year to make sufficient quantity of product to start to meet some of this unmet need. We are able to implement proprietary xeno-free technologies and we certainly have plans to move into 3D bioreactors to allow us to have sufficient capability to meet this large unmet need, said Itescu.

Like many organizations targeting COVID-19, including groups such as AstraZeneca and Regeneron Pharmaceuticals that have large in-house operations, Mesoblast is planning to partner to gain the scale needed to manufacture the quantities of remestemcel-L it may need.

Mesoblast is currently running a phase 3 trial of remestemcel-L in ARDS. Itescu is assuming that the company will be entering into a strategic partnership for manufacturing commercialization to serve the ARDS indication.

The need for remestemcel-L in ARDS will depend on the progress of COVID-19 vaccines, which could significantly reduce the number of people suffering the complication of SARS-CoV-2 infection, and the strength of the phase 3 data.

Itescu explained the rationale for developing remestemcel-L in COVID-19 on the conference call. Like GvHD, a hyperactive immune response, known as a cytokine storm, is implicated in ARDS. In ARDS the cytokine storm manifests in severe inflammation of the lungs.

Remestemcel-L has shown anti-inflammatory effects during its development in GvHD. In addition, there is evidence the cell therapy migrates to the lungs after intravenous administration, suggesting it will accumulate in the part of the body where it is needed most in ARDS,

US physicians administered remestemcel-L to ventilator-dependent patients under a compassionate use program earlier this year. Nine of the 12 patients were taken off ventilator support, after 10 days in median, and later discharged from the hospital.

The evidence to support the use of remestemcel-L in COVID-19 led Mesoblast to start a 300-subject clinical trial. Mesoblast is assessing the effect of remestemcel-L on mortality after 30 days and is set to hold a series of interim analyses as increasing percentages of participants reach that point. If the data link remestemcel-L to improved survival, Mesoblast will seek expedited regulatory approval.

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COVID-19 cell therapy drives Mesoblast to seek manufacturing muscle - BioPharma-Reporter.com

Cartesian Therapeutics Initiates Clinical Trial of First RNA-Engineered Cell Therapy for Acute Respi – PharmiWeb.com

GAITHERSBURG, Md., Sept. 1, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Cartesian Therapeutics, a fully integrated, clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing cell and gene therapies for cancer, autoimmune diseases and respiratory diseases, today announced that it has initiated a Phase 1/2 clinical trial of its lead RNA-engineered mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) therapy, Descartes-30, in patients with moderate-to-severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), including that caused by COVID-19. Based upon the company's research and analysis, this program is understood to be the first RNA-engineered cell therapy to enter clinical development for ARDS and COVID-19. It is also the first cell therapy to specifically degrade NETs, webs of extracellular DNA and histones that entrap inflammatory cells, block alveoli and vessels, and drive the pathogenesis of ARDS and COVID-19.

"Patients with ARDS, especially those with COVID-19 ARDS, generate copious amounts of NETs that physically obstruct alveoli and vessels, which leads to respiratory distress, immune-mediated thrombosis and a vicious cycle of inflammation," said Bruce Levy, MD, Chief of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Parker B. Francis Professor at Harvard Medical School, and a clinical investigator in the Descartes-30 trial. "We would therefore expect that degrading NETs would improve oxygenation as well as resolve thrombi and quell inflammation in these patients. If successful, Descartes-30 would be a highly differentiated game-changer within our limited toolkit in managing this exceedingly difficult condition."

Descartes-30 is an off-the-shelf (allogeneic) MSC product engineered with Cartesian's RNA ArmorySM cell therapy platform. By expressing a unique combination of DNases that work synergistically, Descartes-30 can eliminate large, macroscopic amounts of NETs within minutes. MSCs are inherently immunomodulatory and naturally travel to the lungs, where they are expected to provide continuous, local delivery of DNases to NET-laden lung tissue.

"We engineered Descartes-30 without genomic modification, and therefore the production of DNases is expected to be time-limited to match the acute nature of ARDS," said Metin Kurtoglu, MD, PhD, Chief Medical Officer at Cartesian. "Given thatDescartes-30will produce DNases locally and transiently, we anticipate that it will have a favorable benefit-to-risk profile. We also anticipate that these properties will enable Descartes-30 to treat a wide array of NET-related autoimmune and cardiovascular diseases."

About the Phase 1/2a Clinical Trial

The "Phase 1/2a Study of Descartes-30 in Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome" (NCT04524962) is enrolling patients with ARDS at multiple critical care units in the United States. Patients with ARDS due to COVID-19 are given enrollment priority. This first-in-human study aims to determine the safety and preliminary efficacy of Descartes-30 in patients with moderate to severe ARDS. The study, which is estimated to begin treatment in September, aims to enroll approximately 20 patients prior to initiation of a larger study. For more information visit http://www.cartesiantherapeutics.com/Descartes-30-ARDS.

About ARDS and NETs

ARDS is a severe inflammatory lung disease with a mortality of over 40%. Inflammation leads to injury of lung tissue and leakage of blood and plasma into air spaces, resulting in low oxygen levels and often requiring mechanical ventilation. Inflammation in the lung may lead to inflammation elsewhere, causing shock and injury or dysfunction in the kidneys, heart, and muscles. Some causes of ARDS include COVID-19, severe pneumonia (including influenza), sepsis, trauma, and smoke inhalation.

NETs are inflammatory webs of DNA and proteins produced by neutrophils. NETs are commonly found in ARDS and are thought to exacerbate the disease by physically occluding air spaces and vessels, leading to reduced oxygenation and increased risk of immune thrombi. NETs are implicated in a variety of conditions beyond ARDS, including autoimmune and cardiovascular diseases.

About the RNA ArmorySM

The RNA ArmorySM is Cartesian's proprietary RNA-based cell engineering platform that activates and arms cells with carefully selected, mRNA-based therapeutics. Unmodified donor cells enter the RNA ArmorySMin the millions; a battle-ready cell army leaves the RNA ArmorySMin the tens of billions. Each cell is equipped with a combination of therapeutics rationally chosen to have a synergistic effect on the disease. In the body, the cells deliver a precision-targeted treatment regimen directly to the site of disease. The cells express therapeutics with a defined half-life, enhancing their safety profile and making repeat dosing and outpatient administration possible. The platform is agnostic to cell type: we choose the best cell for the job, whether autologous or off-the shelf. For more information visithttps://www.cartesiantherapeutics.com/rna-armory/.

About Cartesian Therapeutics

Founded in 2016,Cartesianis a fully integrated, clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing potent yet safer cell and gene therapies designed to benefit the broadest range of patients with cancer, autoimmune and respiratory diseases. Cartesianhas three products in clinical development under four open investigational new drug application (INDs) with the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA). All investigational therapies are manufactured at Cartesian's wholly owned, state-of-the-art cGMP manufacturing facility in Gaithersburg, MD.Cartesian's commanding IP position benefits in part from a broad, exclusive patent license from the National Cancer Institute. For more information visithttps://www.cartesiantherapeutics.com/clinical-trials/.

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Cartesian Therapeutics Initiates Clinical Trial of First RNA-Engineered Cell Therapy for Acute Respi - PharmiWeb.com

MaaT Pharma Announces Positive Data for Its Lead Microbiome Biotherapeutic MaaT013 in Intestinal Acute Graft-versus-Host-Disease at the Virtual 46th…

Details Category: DNA RNA and Cells Published on Tuesday, 01 September 2020 11:37 Hits: 198

-- Clinical data was gathered from eleven patients with gastrointestinal (GI) aGvHD treated with MaaT013, MaaT Pharmas full-ecosystem microbiota biotherapeutic, as part of a compassionate use program --

-- MaaT013 provided positive impact with satisfactory safety profile in all eleven patients --

-- Overall response rate was 82% at day 28 after first dosing, including 5 Complete Responses (CR) and 2 Very Good Partial Responses (VGPR) --

LYON, France I August 31, 2020 I MaaT Pharma announced today clinical data on the compassionate use of its lead full-ecosystem microbiome restoration biotherapeutic, MaaT013. The data included eleven patients that developed gastrointestinal, acute Graft-versus-Host-Disease (GI aGvHD), a severe condition where the transplant donors immune cells attack the patients tissues after receiving an allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (allo-HSCT) to treat their hematologic malignancies. All patients showed some response to MaaT013, with five patients achieving a complete response and two having a very good partial response 28 days after first dosing. The results were presented by Dr. Florent Malard, Associate Professor of Hematology at Saint-Antoine Hospital and Sorbonne University in an ePoster presentation on August 29, 2020 during the Virtual 46th Annual Meeting of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT).

There is a strong rationale suggesting that restoration of the microbiota in the gut could play a role in containing intestinal GvHD by modulating the immune system of the patient and we are starting to see this with the administration of MaaT013 in individuals with no other treatment options, said Dr. Florent Malard. The results from this compassionate use program show a remarkable improvement in the patients who achieved a complete response following treatment.

In the presented evaluation, eleven patients with steroid-dependent (n=3) or steroid-refractory (n=8) intestinal aGVHD following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation received at least one and up to three doses of MaaT013 as part of a compassionate program. Most patients (n=10) had developed GI-predominant aGVHD. Treatment response was evaluated seven days after each administration and on day 28 after the first dose. These patients had previously been treated with and failed up to five lines of systemic therapy for aGvHD. Overall response rate was 82% (9/11) at day 28 after first dosing, including 5 Complete Responses (CR), 2 Very Good Partial Responses (VGPR), and 2 Partial Responses (PR). Considering the best GI response that can be achieved, all (11/11) patients experienced at least a PR, with 5 CRs, 4 VGPRs and 2 PRs. Among the 11 treated patients, 6 were still alive at last follow-up (median 214 days; [range, 49-413]). Among the 5 patients with CR, all were still alive at last follow-up and were able to taper or stop steroids and immunosuppressants. Only one patient presented recurrence of GI symptoms at 3 months. Overall, the data demonstrated that reintroduction of a full-ecosystem microbiota provided therapeutic effect in these patients. The safety of the MaaT013 microbiota biotherapeutic was satisfactory in all patients. One patient developed sepsis one day after the third dosing, but no pathogen was identified in blood cultures and the patient recovered after a course of antibiotics.

Data from 8 of these 11 patients had previously been presented at the 61st American Society of Hematology (ASH) 2019 Annual Meeting.

John Weinberg, MD, Chief Medical Officer at MaaT Pharma added, We are encouraged by these positive results from the compassionate use program, which was conducted in parallel to MaaT Pharmas HERACLES Phase II clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of MaaT013 in gastrointestinal predominant, steroid-refractory aGvHD patients. To date, a total of 65 patients have been treated with MaaT013, including patients under compassionate use, patients in an early access program in France, and patients enrolled in the Phase II clinical trial. We expect a primary readout from the trial in Q1 2021.

The poster can be viewed on the companys website.

About MaaT013

MaaT013 is a full-ecosystem, off-the-shelf, standardized, pooled-donor, high-richness microbiome biotherapeutic, in enema formulation. It is manufactured at MaaT Pharmas centralized European cGMP production facility. The product has a stability of up to 24 months and is characterized by a high diversity and consistent richness of microbial species. MaaT013 has been granted Orphan Drug Designation by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the European Medicines Agency (EMA). It is currently being tested in a Phase 2 clinical trial (NCT03359980), and is already being administered in compassionate use.

About MaaT Pharma

MaaT Pharma, a clinical stage company, has established the most complete approach to restoring patient-microbiome symbiosis to improve survival outcomes in life-threatening diseases. Committed to treating cancer and graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), a serious complication of allogeneic stem cell transplantation, MaaT Pharma has already achieved proof of concept in acute myeloid leukemia patients and a Phase 2 clinical trial in acute GvHD is ongoing. Supporting the further expansion of our pipeline into larger indications, we have built a powerful discovery and analysis platform, GutPrint, to evaluate drug candidates, determine novel disease targets and identify biomarkers for microbiome-related conditions. Our therapeutics are produced through a standardized cGMP manufacturing and quality control process to safely deliver the full diversity of the microbiome. MaaT Pharma benefits from the commitment of world-leading scientists and established relationships with regulators to spearhead microbiome treatment integration into clinical practice.

SOURCE: MaaT Pharma

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MaaT Pharma Announces Positive Data for Its Lead Microbiome Biotherapeutic MaaT013 in Intestinal Acute Graft-versus-Host-Disease at the Virtual 46th...

CAR T-Cell Optimization Starts in Production, Extends to Therapy – Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News

Just as heat-seeking missiles race toward the infrared signatures of their targets, chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells home in on cancer-associated or -specific antigens. Once the antigens are engaged, CAR T cells let fly with cytotoxic flak, granules containing perforin and granzymes, while activating supplementary tumor-killing mechanisms such as stromal sensitization and macrophage polarization. It is to be hoped that by the time the cytotoxic smoke clears, the cancer will have been destroyed.

The development of CAR T cells has revolutionized adoptive cellular therapies against cancer. CARs are genetically engineered to combine antigen- or tumor-specific-binding with T-cell activating domains. T cells, obtained from the patient (autologous cells) or from a healthy donor (allogeneic cells), are typically transduced with an engineered vector, expanded, and infused back into the patient for tumor eradication.

In the 10 years since its inception, the CAR T-cell field has progressed rapidly. Two CAR T-cell products have been approved for clinical use, and many more products are undergoing clinical trials or are in development. Although the field initially focused on B-cell malignancies, it is now advancing on solid tumors.

Despite its initial success, the CAR T-cell field must find ways to generate products that are potent, affordable, and available. To achieve enduring success, the CAR T-cell field is undertaking a range of initiatives. These include the engineering of bridging proteins for multiantigen targeting; the creation of nonviral allogeneic off-the-shelf products; the organization of vein-to-vein networks; and the development of precisely tuned therapies, that is, precisely timed and dosed therapies.

Cellular therapy is a living drug, declares Steve Shamah, PhD, senior vice president, Obsidian Therapeutics. As with any drug, damage can occur if the therapy is not carefully regulated. Our company focuses on creating controllable cell therapies by engineering CAR T cells or tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes to produce regulatable cytokines and proteins that can enhance functional activity, especially against solid tumors.

For example, the company is developing a platform that armors CAR T cells with immunomodulatory factors such as interleukin-15 (IL-15) or CD40 ligand. Shamah explains, These factors can enhance functional activity by driving T-cell expansion, conferring resistance to immunosuppression, improving antigen presentation, and inducing antigen spread. However, both factors can also produce systemic toxicity. Our technology modulates the level and timing of their activity in a fully controlled, dose-dependent manner using an FDA-approved small-molecule drug.

The Obsidian platform, cytoDRiVE, adds a drug-responsive domain (DRD) onto a therapeutic protein of interest. DRD tags are misfolded or inherently unstable in the cell. However, they can be reversibly stabilized by the binding of approved small-molecule drugs. When the drug is absent, the DRD-tagged protein is turned off. When the drug is present, the DRD-tagged protein is turned on. When DRD tags are in place, the concentration of the small-molecule drug serves as a biological rheostat for controlling the dosing of the therapeutic protein.

Preclinical in vivo mouse studies assessed anti-CD19 CAR T cells that were engineered to express an IL-15-DRD that responded to the FDA-approved drug acetazolamide. In these studies, tumor regression was demonstrated.

Controlling the precise timing and expression level of these immunomodulatory factors in CAR T cells could significantly enhance safety and therapeutic efficacy, concludes Shamah.

Obsidian is currently focusing on the oncology space, but the company is also exploring other areas such as autoimmunity and even the regulation of transcription factors to enable controllable in vivo CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing.

Despite the remarkable success of CAR T-cell therapies, relapses can occur within six months for up to 50% of patients treated with anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy. Failures can occur due to loss of CD19 expression or to continued tumor proliferation. Aleta Biotherapeutics has developed a novel technology to reactivate CAR T cells in relapsed patients.

Our approach utilizes antigen-bridging proteins to coat tumors with CD19, says Paul Rennert, PhD, Aletas president and CSO. [The tumors are then] recognized by the patients anti-CD19 CAR T cells, essentially creating a cytotoxic synapse that results in tumor cell death.

To thwart anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy relapses, the company developed a bridging protein using the extracellular domain of CD19 and an anti-CD20 antibody domain. CD20 is an antigen present on the majority of B-cell malignancies. Rennert explains that these injected bridging proteins will coat the patients tumor cells with CD19, creating a target to activate or reactivate a patients anti-CD19 CAR T cells.

To show proof-of-principle, the company performed in vivo studies using a half-life-extended form of the bridging protein injected into mice carrying CD20-positive tumor cells and anti-CD19 CAR T cells. Rennert emphasizes, Our studies demonstrated this strategy can be used to reactivate CD19 CAR T cells to prevent and reverse relapses.

Other programs in development include a bridging protein for injection to improve outcomes in multiple myeloma patients treated with CAR T cells, and bridging protein programs for HER2-positive breast cancer patients with central nervous system metastases. The company is preparing investigational new drug applications for its technology and plans to start Phase I trials in 2021.

Assessing whether engineered CAR T-cell and T-cell receptor (TCR) therapies have successfully attacked and penetrated solid tumors (and not normal cells) can be like finding the proverbial needle in the haystack. Traditional methods using immunohistochemistry are useful for immune profiling, but they cannot differentiate engineered versus endogenous cells, points out Christopher Bunker, PhD, senior director of business development, Advanced Cell Diagnostics, a Bio-Techne brand. We developed a means to easily detect and track engineered therapeutic cells and delineate their pharmacokinetics within the tumor microenvironment of intact tumor biopsies, as well as their on-target/off-tumor activity.

Enter RNAscope, an RNA in situ hybridization technology that can enable single-cell spatial transcriptomics. RNAscope, Bunker asserts, is the only off-the-shelf method that can specifically detect engineered CAR T cells and TCR T cells in solid tumor patient biopsies.

Most cell therapies employ lentivirus transduction. Because CAR or TCR transgenes have unique sequences in the viral untranslated regions, these can be used as tags for identification of engineered cell therapies with RNAscope probes. The technology utilizes pools of paired oligos that can be thought of as a ZZ pair, where the paired 3 ends hybridize to ~50 bases of target mRNA, and where the paired 5 ends hybridize to a signal amplification module, which is built through sequential hybridization steps. The signal amplification of paired oligos results in an assay able to detect individual transcripts that appear as visible and quantifiable dots.

Its a little like planting and lighting Christmas trees, quips Bunker. The ZZ pairs plant trees along the mRNA with branches that are decorated either with fluorophores or chromogens. Although the primary technology currently features four colors, the company has developed a HiPlex (12-plex) assay and foresees even higher-plex assays with different detection methods.

We envision assays based on our core technologies that enable spatial analysis of perhaps a hundred transcripts in combination with tens of proteins, Bunker projects. In the context of cell therapy development, these will enable a more comprehensive understanding of tumor biology and immune cell profiles to determine the most effective treatment strategy for a patient, as well as for monitoring efficacy of solid tumor cellular therapies.

Companies developing CAR T-cell products are also eyeing a future involving GMP production. Thus, a critical early question is how to choose the best T-cell medium for manufacturing processes. To test the suitability of a CAR T-cell growing medium, companies must assess factors such as cell viability, cell expansion, cytokine profiles, and cell purity. A medium suitable for a CAR T-cell manufacturing process also needs to support rapid activation and CAR transduction. Additionally, the selected medium needs to be compatible with a variety of donors.

There are many available choices for T-cell culture media ranging from do-it-yourself recipes to commercially available one-size-fits-all complete formulations. CellGenix has developed a novel T-cell medium that avoids the use of human serum. Sebastian Warth, PhD, a senior scientist at CellGenix, explains, To achieve consistent results, human serum requires extensive testing prior to its use for production of cellular products due to lot-to-lot inconsistencies. Since human serum is a limited resource and might not be available in large quantities, it is unfavorable for commercial-scale manufacturing. Furthermore, the human origin of serum poses a certain risk of containing adventitious agents and is, therefore, a risk to the safety of the T-cell therapy product.

The companys TCM GMP-Prototype medium provides a serum-free and xeno-free product for early-onset T-cell expansion. According to Warth, key advantages include promotion of sustained viability, support for expansion of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, promotion of a central memory and early differentiated memory T-cell phenotype, and maintenance of a high proportion of cytokine-producing cells including polyfunctional cells. Further, it was optimized for and verified with CAR T cells.

While autologous CAR T-cell therapies have proven highly successful, they also require a long and expensive manufacturing process. The dream of being able to utilize off-the-shelf allogeneic T cells is on the horizon.

Devon J. Shedlock, PhD, senior vice president, research and development, Poseida Therapeutics, reports, With our technology, we are able to genetically modify cells to create a fully allogenic, or off-the-shelf, product that does not require additional immunosuppression treatment like earlier generation approaches. We also have developed technology to allow us to make hundreds of doses from a single manufacturing run from healthy donors, thereby dropping the cost substantially.

According to Shedlock, the technology consists of three key aspects: 1) the piggyback DNA Modification System, 2) the Cas-CLOVER site-specific gene editing system, and 3) the Booster Molecule.

The PiggyBac DNA Modification System is a nonviral technology for stably integrating genes into DNA. One key feature is that piggyBac preferentially inserts into less mature T cells, enabling the production of therapies that have a high proportion of stem cell memory T cells, or Tscm cells.

Viral technologies are virtually excluded from Tscm cells, Shedlock states. However, Tscm cells are the ideal cell type for cell-based therapies because they have the ability to engraft and potentially last a lifetime, can produce wave after wave of more differentiated cells to attack the tumor, and are much more tolerable with low levels of adverse events compared to other CAR T-cell products.

The companys Cas-CLOVER gene editing technology is a hybrid gene editing technology used to edit the T cells to make allogeneic products. Cas-CLOVER works well in resting T cells, which is important in preserving Tscm cells in a fully allogeneic CAR T-cell product, Shedlock elaborates. It also is a very precise and clean system. This is a particularly important safety issue for allogeneic products that may be given to many patients.

The Booster Molecule is added during manufacture and is temporarily expressed on the cell surface to allow cell stimulation. Normally when allogeneic CAR T-cell products are created, the T-cell receptor must be eliminated to avoid the graft-versus-host reaction, which is a major safety issue. Importantly, this booster stimulation occurs while preserving the Tscm phenotype.

Poseida Therapeutics expects to launch a clinical trial for its multiple myeloma allogeneic product late this year or early next year. The company will also begin clinical trials later in 2021 on its pan-solid tumor allogeneic program.

Creation of partnerships can help drive development of CAR T-cell therapeutics from concept through clinical trials. Advanced therapies require advanced supply chain and data management, advises Minh Hong, PhD, head of autologous cell therapy, Lonza Pharma & Biotech. Prior biopharmaceutical models of mass production and distributionand the systems that support themare not effective for personalized therapeutics. As manufacturing demand increases for autologous cell therapies, there is an overarching need to both industrialize and simplify the entire supply chain ecosystem.

Hong says the overall project needs to be considered from a more comprehensive perspective: Due to the criticality of the starting material, everything from cell sourcing, patient coordination and scheduling for collection/infusion, transportation logistics, and manufacturing logistics needs to be coordinated, ensuring the highest standards, regulatory compliance, and safety throughout the process.

To meet these needs, Lonza is building a network of partners to develop a fully integrated vein-to-vein solution, that is, a system that includes all touch points involved in patient scheduling and sample collection, through material shipping logistics, manufacturing, and eventually the infusion of the cell therapy back into the patient. The partner network, Hong indicates, will help participants define smart workflows and execute an integration strategy. Hong sums up the networks therapeutic implications as follows: We believe these partnerships will decrease time to clinical program setup.

Lonza has more than a 20-year history of providing clinical and commercial manufacturing. Hong asserts, Our company brings to the table our process development and manufacturing experience along with proprietary solutions including a manufacturing execution system solution, MODA-ESTM, for electronic batch records and manufacturing traceability. In addition, we have announced partnerships with Vineti for a supply chain orchestration system and Cryoport to aid in shipping and logistics.

Lonza is also looking beyond CAR T-cell therapies. We would not limit our solutions and partnerships to autologous cell therapies, Hong declares. We can envision solutions for our in vivo viral vector manufacturing clients as well as our traditional allogeneic cell therapy clients.

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CAR T-Cell Optimization Starts in Production, Extends to Therapy - Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News

New Comprehensive Report on Stem Cell Therapy Market to Witness an Outstanding Growth during 2020 2025 with Top Players Like Chiesi Pharmaceuticals,…

The Stem Cell TherapyIndustry study now available at Grand View Report, is a detailed sketch of the business sphere in terms of current and future trends driving the profit matrix. The report also indicates a pointwise outline of market share, market size, industry partakers, and regional landscape along with statistics, diagrams, & charts elucidating various noteworthy parameters of the industry landscape.

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Top Key Players Profiled in This Report: , Osiris Therapeutics, NuVasive, Chiesi Pharmaceuticals, JCRPharmaceutical, Pharmicell, Medi-post, Anterogen, Molmed, Takeda (TiGenix)

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New Comprehensive Report on Stem Cell Therapy Market to Witness an Outstanding Growth during 2020 2025 with Top Players Like Chiesi Pharmaceuticals,...

Learn global specifications of the Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market – StartupNG

Global Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market Report 2019 Market Size, Share, Price, Trend and Forecast is a professional and in-depth study on the current state of the global Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment industry.

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For competitor segment, the report includes global key players of Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment as well as some small players.

Market: Drivers and Restrains The research report has incorporated the analysis of different factors that augment the markets growth. It constitutes trends, restraints, and drivers that transform the market in either a positive or negative manner. This section also provides the scope of different segments and applications that can potentially influence the market in the future. The detailed information is based on current trends and historic milestones. This section also provides an analysis of the volume of sales about the global market and also about each type from 2015 to 2026. This section mentions the volume of sales by region from 2015 to 2026. Pricing analysis is included in the report according to each type from the year 2015 to 2026, manufacturer from 2015 to 2020, region from 2015 to 2020, and global price from 2015 to 2026. A thorough evaluation of the restrains included in the report portrays the contrast to drivers and gives room for strategic planning. Factors that overshadow the market growth are pivotal as they can be understood to devise different bends for getting hold of the lucrative opportunities that are present in the ever-growing market. Additionally, insights into market experts opinions have been taken to understand the market better. Global Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market: Segment Analysis The research report includes specific segments such as application and product type. Each type provides information about the sales during the forecast period of 2015 to 2026. The application segment also provides revenue by volume and sales during the forecast period of 2015 to 2026. Understanding the segments helps in identifying the importance of different factors that aid the market growth. Global Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market: Regional Analysis The research report includes a detailed study of regions of North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, and Middle East and Africa. The report has been curated after observing and studying various factors that determine regional growth such as economic, environmental, social, technological, and political status of the particular region. Analysts have studied the data of revenue, sales, and manufacturers of each region. This section analyses region-wise revenue and volume for the forecast period of 2015 to 2026. These analyses will help the reader to understand the potential worth of investment in a particular region. Global Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market: Competitive Landscape This section of the report identifies various key manufacturers of the market. It helps the reader understand the strategies and collaborations that players are focusing on combat competition in the market. The comprehensive report provides a significant microscopic look at the market. The reader can identify the footprints of the manufacturers by knowing about the global revenue of manufacturers, the global price of manufacturers, and sales by manufacturers during the forecast period of 2015 to 2019. Following are the segments covered by the report are: Androgenic Alopecia Congenital Alopecia Cicatricial Or Scarring Alopecia By Application: Hospital Dermatology Clinic Other Key Players: The Key manufacturers that are operating in the global Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market are: Kerastem Eclipse Regen Lab SA Stemcell Technologies RepliCel Life Sciences Histogen Glofinn Oy. Competitive Landscape The analysts have provided a comprehensive analysis of the competitive landscape of the global Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market with the company market structure and market share analysis of the top players. The innovative trends and developments, mergers and acquisitions, product portfolio, and new product innovation to provide a dashboard view of the market, ultimately providing the readers accurate measure of the current market developments, business strategies, and key financials.

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Important Key questions answered in Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market report:

What will the market growth rate, Overview, and Analysis by Type of Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment in 2024?

What are the key factors affecting market dynamics? What are the drivers, challenges, and business risks in Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market?

What is Dynamics, This Overview Includes Analysis of Scope and price analysis of top Manufacturers Profiles?

Who Are Opportunities, Risk and Driving Force of Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market? Knows Upstream Raw Materials Sourcing and Downstream Buyers.

Who are the key manufacturers in space? Business Overview by Type, Applications, Gross Margin, and Market Share

What are the opportunities and threats faced by manufacturers in the global market?

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The content of the study subjects, includes a total of 15 chapters:

Chapter 1, to describe Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment product scope, market overview, market opportunities, market driving force and market risks.

Chapter 2, to profile the top manufacturers of Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment , with price, sales, revenue and global market share of Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment in 2019 and 2015.

Chapter 3, the Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment competitive situation, sales, revenue and global market share of top manufacturers are analyzed emphatically by landscape contrast.

Chapter 4, the Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment breakdown data are shown at the regional level, to show the sales, revenue and growth by regions, from 2019 to 2025.

Chapter 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9, to break the sales data at the country level, with sales, revenue and market share for key countries in the world, from 2019 to 2025.

Chapter 10 and 11, to segment the sales by type and application, with sales market share and growth rate by type, application, from 2019 to 2025.

Chapter 12, Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market forecast, by regions, type and application, with sales and revenue, from 2019 to 2025.

Chapter 13, 14 and 15, to describe Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment sales channel, distributors, customers, research findings and conclusion, appendix and data source.

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Learn global specifications of the Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market - StartupNG

Hill Highlights the Potential of Selinexor as a Less Intensive Option for DLBCL – OncLive

Selinexor (Xpovio) may serve as a favorable therapeutic option for patients with relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) who are not eligible for intensive chemotherapy or CAR T-cell therapy, according to Brian T. Hill, MD, PhD, who added that the agent is now being explored in combination as well as in earlier lines of treatment.

In June 2020, the FDA approved selinexor for the treatment of patients with relapsed/refractory DLBCL, not otherwise specified, including DLBCL arising from follicular lymphoma, following at least 2 lines of systemic therapy.

The regulatory decision was based on data from the phase 2b SADAL trial(NCT02227251),in which the agent elicited a 29% overall response rate (ORR; 95% CI, 22-38) in a total of 129 patients with DLBCL after 2 to 5 systemic regimens; this included a complete response rate of 13%. Notably, 38% of patients who achieved a partial response or CR had response durations of at least 6 months; 15% had response durations that persisted for at least 12 months. These responses were encouraging, noted Hill, especially for such a heavily pretreated population.

Selinexor is an oral agent that can potentially be taken for prolonged periods of time with adequate supportive care and monitoring for adverse effects (AEs); that's new to the field and new to this disease, said Hill. All of the effective therapies we've had previously have been exclusively intravenous or rely on intravenous therapy. Particularly for older patients who are not candidates for intensive therapy such as autologous stem cell transplant or CAR T-cell therapy, [selinexor] may represent a viable treatment strategy.

In an interview withOncLive,Hill, director of the Lymphoid Malignancies Program and a staff physician at the Cleveland Clinic Taussig Cancer Institute, shed light on XPO1 as a target in DLBCL, the emergence of selinexor in the treatment landscape, and exciting agents in the pipeline.

OncLive: Could you start off by describing the challenges faced in managing heavily pretreated patients with DLBCL?

Hill: After [progression on] frontline therapy, patients with DLBCL are at high risk for [additional] treatment failure and poor survival. We had autologous stem cell transplant for appropriate candidates and now we have CAR T-cell therapy, as well. However, beyond those 2 relatively intense modalities of treatment, historically, we've had very few tools to treat patients who are in a deep relapsed or refractory state.

How has treatment evolved in recent years?

The major change in the treatment of [patients with] relapsed DLBCL was introduced a couple of years ago with the FDA approval of CAR T-cell therapy. Before this modality, we really did not have any good [methods for] achieving durable remission for patients who had relapsed after autologous stem cell transplant, or for those who could never achieve sufficient disease control or have enough chemosensitivity to make it to transplant.

We're now in this postCAR T era, but the reality is that the rate of durable remission in the best of circumstances, even with CAR T-cell therapy, [ranges from approximately] 40% to 50% [of patients who go on to achieve] durable remission. That means that even with CAR T cells, over half of patients are still going to progress on their treatment. There's still an unmet need for effective therapies that can keep patients going beyond that.

Could you speak to XPO1 as a target in this disease?

XPO1 is a nuclear export protein, which shuttles various transcription factors and other regulatory proteins in and out of the cell nucleus. By inhibiting XPO1 with the selective nuclear export inhibitor selinexor, their cell undergoes apoptosis through a variety of mechanisms. This is a novel target we haven't had before in oncology.

Selinexor was recently approved by the FDA. Could you speak to thefindings from the phase 2b SADAL trialthat led to its approval?

Selinexor was previously FDA approved for use in heavily pretreated multiple myeloma and [the agent] recently gained approval for relapsed/refractory DLBCL based on findings from the SADAL trial. This [trial was done in] a heavily pretreated patient population, many of whom received multiple lines of previous therapy, including autologous stem cell transplant. In these patients, selinexor was given orally twice a week at a couple of different doses, either 100 mg or 60 mg. The toxicity seen at the high dose was significant in terms of cytopenia and gastrointestinal [AEs]. However, those AEs [were reduced when the drug was given] at the dose of 60 mg twice a week. The ORR was [around] 30%, which for a heavily pretreated patient population is very reasonable.

Is selinexor under examination in any other clinical trials?

As is frequently the case with new drug approvals, selinexor was shown to have activity in an extensively pretreated patient population. The natural progression of [research and] development is going to be to move the agent into earlier lines of treatment.

Right now, the drug is being [evaluated in] various second- and third-line platinum-based chemotherapy combinations that still have activity in DLBCL; the potential that this may be additive [in terms of] efficacy without additional toxicity is being examined, as well.

Beyond this agent, are any efforts examining XPO1 inhibition?

This target is now being explored in a wide variety of malignancies. In addition to multiple myeloma and DLBCL, [XPO1 inhibitors] now being combined with other pathway inhibitors, both for hematologic malignancies and for solid tumors.

Are any other notable agents coming down the pike that you wanted to highlight?

Just within the past year, we've had 3 drugs approved in the relapsed/refractory DLBCL setting. We have the antibody-drug conjugate polatuzumab vedotin(Polivy); the monoclonal antibody [targeted] against CD19, tafasitamab-cxix (Monjuvi), which is used in combination with lenalidomide(Revlimid); and selinexor.

[These agents are] welcome additions; [its important] to have more than 1 option [for] this patient population because it's unlikely that any of these [agents] are going to be curative. However, if were able to extend the patient's wellbeing and livelihood for a period of time following progression on curative intent therapy, [were] still clinically benefitting them.

FDA approves selinexor for relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. News release. FDA. June 22, 2020. Accessed August 30, 2020. bit.ly/37VnEXd.

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Hill Highlights the Potential of Selinexor as a Less Intensive Option for DLBCL - OncLive

Emerging Evidence Supports the Use of Narsoplimab in HSCT-TMA – OncLive

During the 2020 European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation Annual Meeting, Rafael F. Duarte, MD, PhD, FRCP, of the Hospital Universitario Puerta de Hierro Majadahonda in Madrid, Spain, presented 2 real-world clinical cases in which the investigational monoclonal antibody narsoplimab (OMS721) demonstrated clinical benefit in patients with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation-associated thrombotic microangiopathy (HSCT-TMA).

Because the selection of patients for clinical trials has limitations, and more so, because running a trial is a hard endeavor for this difficult complication, [I wanted to share] some hands-on experience that we have had with narsoplimab outside of the trial with some case studies of patients who have been treated in a compassionate-use basis, said Duarte.

First, Duarte shared a case of a 19-year-old female who received narsoplimab following matched-sibling allogeneic HSCT to treat her B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) in first complete remission.

At 5 months, the patient experienced late-onset acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and severe HSCT-TMA with lower gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding and ischemic ulcers. While skin involvement of GVHD resolved, she received initial treatment with 1 dose of eculizumab (Soliris) due to persistent GI symptoms after steroids, mesenchymal stromal cells, and extracorporeal photopheresis. Additionally, she received 4 mg/kg of narsoplimab once or twice weekly for a total of 18 doses.

We asked for narsoplimab purely on the basis that this was a severely immunocompromised patient who had experienced complications before and who had been receiving a lot of immunosuppression for the treatment of GVHD, said Duarte. We tried to minimize immunosuppression, so we thought narsoplimab would be a good option.

According to Duarte, the patients GI bleeding and microangiopathy hemolytic anemia resolved quickly and dramatically after starting narsoplimab. Additionally, she became transfusion independent with platelet counts above 100 x 109 per liter.

At 21 months, the patient remains in complete remission (CR) of B-ALL and is devoid of signs of HSCT-TMA after discontinuing narsoplimab.

Subsequently, Duarte presented another, more complex case of a 48-year-old male with HIV and Hodgkin lymphoma who was in his third CR.

Following CCR5-32/32 HSCT, the patient experienced very early HSCT-TMA on day 0. Subsequently, he had rapid severe renal failure that required hemodialysis.

Initial treatment with calcineurin inhibitor withdrawal did not elicit any response, so he was started on narsoplimab at 4 mg/kg twice weekly on day 6. He received a total of 8 doses of narsoplimab.

The patients lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), bilirubin, and schistocyte counts improved rapidly following narsoplimab initiation. Additionally, the patient derived partial improvement of renal function and fluid management, although he required continued dialysis.

Despite this, at 31 days post-transplant, the patient had multiple secondary complications as a result of the CCR5-32/32 HSCT and experienced sudden death. The death was not thought to be related to TMA and no autopsy was granted.

We dont have a better explanation regarding what happened with this patient, unfortunately, Duarte explained. We think we are seeing that many of the patients who undergo transplant with this mutated CCR5-32/32 tend to have greater mortality and greater complications than HIV-positive patients who undergo transplant with standard [procedure].

Duarte also presented findings from the pivotal, phase 2 trial, in which narsoplimab demonstrated high rates of CRs, as well as improved laboratory and clinical markers among patients with HSCT-TMA.

Narsoplimab was previously granted a breakthrough therapy designation by the FDA for the treatment of patients with high-risk TA-TMA. In addition, the agent was granted an orphan drug designation for TA-TMA therapy and complement-mediated TMA prevention.

Findings from the single-arm, open-label phase 2 trial demonstrated a 54% CR rate in all treated patients (n = 28) with the mannan-binding lectin-associated serine protease-2 inhibitor (95% CI, 34%-72%). Additionally, patients treated per protocol recommendations (n = 23), which entailed 4 weeks or more of dosing, achieved a CR rate of 65% (95% CI, 43%-84%).

At 100 days following HSCT-TMA diagnosis, 68% of all treated patients, 83% of patients treated per protocol, and 93% of treatment responders (n = 15) were alive.

Eligible patients had to be 18 years of older at screening, which occurred during the patients first visit. Additionally, patients had to have persistent HSCT-TMA as defined by a platelet count less than 150,000 per L, evidence of microangiopathy hemolysis such as the presence of schistocytes, serum LDH greater than upper limit of normal, or haptoglobin less than the lower limit of normal, and renal dysfunction defined as doubling of serum creatinine compared with pre-transplant level. All of the following had to be present for at least 2 weeks following modification or discontinuation of calcineurin inhibitors.

Patients who had eculizumab therapy within 3 months of screening, positive direct Coombs test, or active systemic bacteria or fungal infection that required antimicrobial therapy beyond prophylactic antimicrobial therapy as a standard of care were excluded from the study.

Response-based efficacy requiring improvement in TMA laboratory markers of platelet count and LDH and improvement in clinical status, as well as safety, served as the primary end points of the trial. Secondary end points included survival and change from baseline laboratory markers.

Regarding laboratory markers, LDH had to be less than 1.5 L. For patients who had a baseline platelet count of 20,000/L, improvement was defined as a tripling of baseline platelet count more than 30,000 and freedom from platelet transfusion. For patients with a baseline platelet count of more than 20,000, improvement was defined as an increased count of least 50% and absolute count of more than 75,000, as well as freedom from platelet transfusion.

Clinical improvement was based off any of the following improvements in specific organ function. Patients could derive blood improvement defined as transfusion freedom; renal improvement defined as a reduction of creatinine of more than 40%, normalization of creatinine and more than 20% reduction of creatinine, or discontinuation of renal replacement therapy; pulmonary improvement defined as extubation and discontinuation of ventilator support, or discontinuation of non-invasive mechanical ventilation; gastrointestinal improvement defined as improvement assessed by MAGIC (Mount Sinai GVHD International Consortium) criteria; or neurological improvement defined as limited to stroke, posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome, seizures, and weakness.

Eligible patients had an average age of 48, and 71% were male. Moreover, 96% of patients had malignant underlying disease. Regarding risk factors, 64% had GVHD, 75% had significant infection, 14% had non-infectious pulmonary complications, such as idiopathy pneumonia syndrome or diffuse alveolar hemorrhage, and 50% had neurological signs.

Moreover, the study population was defined as high risk as 93% of patients had multiple risk factors associated with poor outcome.

Regarding safety, any-grade toxicities were observed in 92.9% of patients treated with narsoplimab. The most common adverse effects (AEs) included nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, hypokalemia, neutropenia, and fever.

Additionally, 21% of patients died while on study; however, all deaths were attributed to common complications of HSCT.

Investigators concluded that similar AEs are associated with patients who undergo transplant and that narsoplimab was generally well tolerated.

These are very highly encouraging results with narsoplimab in patients with very severe TMA who are unresponsive to other treatments. These results suggest that narsoplimab may be of benefit in these severely ill, complex patients with TMA, including those in the most complex clinical scenarios, Duarte concluded.

Reference

Duarte R. MASP-2 inhibition with the investigational agent narsoplimab for the treatment of HSCT-TMA: overview of data and case discussion. Presented at: 2020 European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation Annual Meeting; August 30-September 2, 2020; Virtual. Session IS28-4.

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Emerging Evidence Supports the Use of Narsoplimab in HSCT-TMA - OncLive

Blood cancer survivor who found donor ‘at the eleventh hour’ highlights importance of stem cell donations – Leicestershire Live

Rik Basra was diagnosed with a deadly form of blood cancer in 2009, and then again in 2011.

The father of two was fortunate enough to survive the Acute Myeloid Leukaemia after a last-minute stem cell donor was found in Germany.

The stem cell transplant was successful, which meant the former Leicestershire Police employee could continue to spend time with his family.

Speaking to LeicestershireLive, he detailed his experience and stressed the importance of people joining the donor register.

He said: "I was diagnosed in 2009 originally and was cleared, but then in 2011 it came back.

"The second time I was told that I would need a stem cell transplant and without one I wouldn't make it.

"I had actually finished my last round of chemotherapy and they couldn't give me anymore, because it would have killed me.

"But they managed to find a donor at the 11th hour from someone in Germany."

When the donor was found Rik and his family felt as though all their Christmases had come all at once, he said.

It wasn't a perfect match, but it was enough to give Rik a fighting chance.

After having the stem cell transplant on Christmas Eve in 2011, Rik hasn't had any problems since and says he has got his future back.

"I had been told to make funeral arrangements before that," he said.

"I was shocked and actually I wanted to jump up and down in the air, it was such a surprise.

"Before that, we were just hoping for the best and preparing for the worst.

"We were hoping that some miracle could happen and it did; we got a match. And you have to remember that all those searches had taken place, so this came completely out of the blue."

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But Rik's situation isn't unique. He said every 14 minutes someone else is diagnosed and in need of the very same stem cell treatment that saved his life.

For some, that match is never found and the arrival of Covid-19 has only reduced the number of people ready and willing to donate.

"It's still really important that people sign up to the register," said Rik.

"Blood cancer doesn't stop for Covid-19.

"You don't have to die to donate your stem cells.

"Anyone could be diagnosed. It's a vested interested for everyone to get involved and do something.

"All the things you take for granted, which were challenging for me, I can now do. It has saved my life and I have got my future back.

"I have two daughters and a granddaughter and I wouldn't have known her and she wouldn't have known me if it wasn't for the donation."

Since his treatment, he has set up Rik Basra Leukaemia Campaign in which he seeks to help people from all different backgrounds join the register and reassures them about any worries they may have.

Anthony Nolan is a charity that works in the areas of leukaemia and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.

Since the start of the lockdown in March this year, they have seen a huge downfall in the number of donations not just in Leicester but all over the UK.

From March to August 2019, Anthony Nolan held over 300 stem cell donor recruitment events which added over 12,500 donors to the register. Since lockdown in March this year, theyve held zero.

Nearly 19,000 fewer people have joined the stem cell register so far this year compared to the same period in 2019.

In Leicester, between March and August last year, 557 people joined the Anthony Nolan register compared to just 190 between March and August this year.

Henny Braund, chief executive of Anthony Nolan, says: "Unfortunately, the coronavirus pandemic has had a serious impact on our ability to talk to people about the Anthony Nolan register and about their life-saving potential.

"Social distancing restrictions have meant that donor recruitment events have been cancelled and we havent been able to speak to students at schools and universities like we usually would.

"This has resulted in a drop in sign-ups to the register, however transplants continue to happen around the world, which means that we still desperately need people to join the Anthony Nolan register.

"The more people join, the more opportunities are afforded to patients who urgently need treatment. We are particularly calling on young men aged 16-30 to join, as they are the most likely to be chosen to donate."

Joining the register is easy and it can be done online.

If you wish to sign up to the register and help to save lives by donating your stem cells, you can do so by clicking here.

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Blood cancer survivor who found donor 'at the eleventh hour' highlights importance of stem cell donations - Leicestershire Live