- Shah, Nina;
- Li, Li;
- McCarty, Jessica;
- Kaur, Indreshpal;
- Yvon, Eric;
- Shaim, Hila;
- Muftuoglu, Muharrem;
- Liu, Enli;
- Orlowski, Robert Z;
- Cooper, Laurence;
- Lee, Dean;
- Parmar, Simrit;
- Cao, Kai;
- Sobieiski, Catherine;
- Saliba, Rima;
- Hosing, Chitra;
- Ahmed, Sairah;
- Nieto, Yago;
- Bashir, Qaiser;
- Patel, Krina;
- Bollard, Catherine;
- Qazilbash, Muzaffar;
- Champlin, Richard;
- Rezvani, Katy;
- Shpall, Elizabeth J
Multiple myeloma (MM) is a disease with known immune dysregulation. Natural killer (NK) cells have shown preclinical activity in MM. We conducted a first-in-human study of umbilical cord blood-derived (CB) NK cells for MM patients undergoing high dose chemotherapy and autologous haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (auto-HCT). Patients received lenalidomide (10 mg) on days -8 to -2, melphalan 200 mg/m2 on day -7, CB-NK cells on day -5 and auto-HCT on day 0. Twelve patients were enrolled, three on each of four CB-NK cell dose levels: 5 × 106 , 1 × 107 , 5 × 107 and 1 × 108 CB-NK cells/kg. Ten patients had either high-risk chromosomal changes or a history of relapsed/progressed disease. There were no infusional toxicities and no graft-versus-host disease. One patient failed to engraft due to poor autologous graft quality and was rescued with a back-up autologous graft. Overall, 10 patients achieved at least a very good partial response as their best response, including eight with near complete response or better. With a median follow-up of 21 months, four patients have progressed or relapsed, two of whom have died. CB-NK cells were detected in vivo in six patients, with an activated phenotype (NKG2D+ /NKp30+ ). These data warrant further development of this novel cellular therapy.