Breyanzi

_Breyanzi_

Generic Name

_Breyanzi_

Mechanism

  • Engineering: Patient’s peripheral blood T cells are harvested (apheresis) and transduced ex vivo with a lentiviral vector encoding a CAR that combines:
  • An anti‑CD19 single‑chain variable fragment (scFv) for antigen recognition
  • An intracellular costimulatory domain (CD28 or 4‑1BB) and CD3ζ activation domain
  • Target‑cell engagement: Upon infusion, the CAR‑T cells proliferate, home to lymphoid tissues, and bind CD19+ malignant B cells.
  • Cytotoxic response: Engaged CAR‑T cells release perforin/granzyme and express cytokines (IFN‑γ, TNF‑α) → direct lysis and activation of innate immune effectors.
  • Expansion and persistence: The product leads to an in‑vivo expansion peak, followed by gradual decline; long‑term persistence correlates with durable responses in some patients.

Pharmacokinetics

ParameterTypical Findings
AdministrationSingle intravenous infusion after lymphodepletion
Cellular kineticsPeak expansion 7–14 days post‑infusion; half‑life ~20–30 days for CAR‑T cells
ClearanceAutologous T‑cell clearance is variable; no traditional hepatic/renal elimination
MetabolismNot applicable (cell product)

Indications

  • Approved: Adults (≥18 yrs) with R/R large B‑cell lymphoma who have received ≥4 prior therapies, including an anti‑CD20 antibody, a cytotoxic regimen, and a second‑line therapy.
  • Off‑label considerations: Investigational trials for other CD19+ B‑cell malignancies (e.g., ALL, DLBCL de‑novo).

Contraindications

  • Contraindications:
  • Active uncontrolled infection (except mild, self‑limited)
  • CNS involvement > 30 mm or symptomatic leptomeningeal disease
  • Pregnant or lactating women
  • Serious heart failure (NYHA III–IV)
  • Warnings:
  • Cytokine release syndrome (CRS): potentially life‑threatening; requires close monitoring.
  • Immune effector cell‑associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS): neurocognitive changes, seizures possible.
  • Infections: prolonged cytopenias → neutropenia, hypogammaglobulinemia.
  • Tumor lysis syndrome (TLS): rare but possible for bulky disease.
  • Myocardial infiltration: possible heart failure.

Dosing

  • Lymphodepletion: 3 days of:
  • Fludarabine 30 mg/m²/day IV
  • Cyclophosphamide 500 mg/m²/day IV
  • CAR‑T dose: 1 × 10⁶ CAR‑positive T‑cells/kg body weight
  • Infusion:

1. Premedication: antipyretic (acetaminophen), antihistamine, and corticosteroid (dexamethasone 10 mg IV) recommended, especially for CRS mitigation.

2. Slow IV infusion over 60–120 min; monitor for infusion reactions.

3. Post‑infusion: ICU or high‑dependency unit observation for first 48 h; continuous monitoring of vitals and neurological status.

Adverse Effects

  • Common (≥20 %)
  • Fever, chills, nausea, vomiting
  • Cytopenias (neutropenia, anemia, thrombocytopenia)
  • Transient hypogammaglobulinemia
  • Injection‑site reactions
  • Serious (≥5 %)
  • CRS: fever, hypotension, hypoxia, multi‑organ dysfunction
  • ICANS: agitation, aphasia, seizures, cerebral edema
  • Neurotoxicity: worsening encephalopathy
  • Infections: opportunistic (CMV, fungal, viral)
  • Cardiovascular: myocarditis, arrhythmias
  • TLS: hyperuricemia, hyperkalemia, hyperphosphatemia

Monitoring

TimepointAssessment
BaselineCBC with differential, CMP, LDH, ferritin, IL‑6, CRP, viral screen (CMV, EBV, HSV), cardiac enzymes if high‑risk
Pre‑infusionVital signs, neuro exam, weight, BMI
Day +1 to +14Daily vitals; CBC, CMP, ferritin, IL‑6; neurological evaluation twice‑daily
Day +15 to +30Weekly labs; assess for prolonged cytopenias; immunoglobulin levels
Long‑termEvery 4–12 weeks: CBC, CMP, B‑cell subset, LAG-3/PD‑1 checkpoints; imaging per protocol

CRS and ICANS grading (Lee et al.) dictates escalation:
CRS: Grade 1–2 → antipyretics; Grade 3–4 → tocilizumab + corticosteroids.
ICANS: Grade 2–5 → dexamethasone + neuro‑consultation.

Clinical Pearls

  • Early CRS detection: Educate staff on the early signs (fever ≥ 38 °C, tachycardia) – 50 % of patients develop CRS within 48 h. Prompt tocilizumab and steroids reduce ICU stays.
  • Optimizing lymphodepletion: Tailor dose based on patient’s renal/hepatic function; avoid excessive cyclophosphamide in heart‑failure patients.
  • Neurotoxicity prevention: Baseline MRI in patients with brain metastases; avoid concurrent radiotherapy when possible.
  • Re‑infusion potential: Some patients may benefit from a second infusion (≤ 2 g cell dose) if initial response is suboptimal and remission status is achieved.
  • Immunoglobulin replacement: Consider prophylactic IVIG once IgG  20 cm³, LDH > 4×ULN, CD19 density—may benefit from prophylactic tocilizumab.
  • Documentation: Maintain a CRS score spreadsheet; this assists in timely intervention and quality metrics for CAR‑T programs.

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• *All information reflects current FDA labeling and peer‑reviewed literature up to 2024. Always consult the latest product insert for updates.*

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Medical Disclaimer: Medical definitions are provided for educational purposes and should not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

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