Dr Stephen Schuster: Unique CAR T Toxicities Require Provider Education

Video

Since patients who receive CAR T-cell therapy experience unique adverse events, there will need to be education for providers who care for these patients, explained Stephen Schuster, MD, of the Perelman School of Medicine.

Since patients who receive CAR T-cell therapy experience unique adverse events, there will need to be education for providers who care for these patients, explained Stephen Schuster, MD, of the Perelman School of Medicine.

Transcript

What is known about the adverse events of CAR T treatments and how they are handled?

There are some adverse events of special interest, because they’re not seen with chemotherapy or with the currently available therapies that we use. They are cytokine release syndrome and neurotoxic syndrome.

So, the cytokine release syndrome is akin to what you would expect in a patient if they had an overwhelming infection or severe sepsis: low/high fever, low blood pressure, sometimes capillary leak syndrome—meaning egress of fluid into lungs and tissues, which leads to respiratory failure and kidney failure and organ failure and death, if untreated. So, one has to know how to monitor the patients for this syndrome. By and large, severe cytokine release syndrome that is life threatening is fortunately less frequent than all grades. And, it varies from T-cell product to T-cell product, but we’ve learned that it can be treated with the IL-6 blocking antibody, tocilizumab, successfully in almost all cases. So, most of the recent trials have not shown any deaths from cytokine release syndrome, now that we recognize the syndrome as a consequence of T-cell therapy and we’ve learned how to manage it.

The neurotoxic events we don’t know really how to predict. We don’t know how to manage them, because we don’t understand them. Although, the good thing is, they’re generally reversible within a week without any treatment; although, frequently patients are given some steroids to try to blunt T-cell activity, presuming that’s what’s mediating the syndrome. And it can vary from just a mild confusion, word-finding difficulty, to coma. So, there’s a spectrum of severity. Fortunately, most of the events are not severe. Very rare that someone has a mortality to central nervous system side effects.

They’re unique toxicities that physicians and providers will have to be educated about when they begin to use this kind of therapy or manage patients that have had this kind of therapy.

Recent Videos
David Barrett, JD, the chief executive officer of ASGCT
David-Alexandre C. Gros, MD, Eledon’s chief executive officer
David Barrett, JD, the chief executive officer of ASGCT
Alfred L. Garfall, MD, MS, associate professor of medicine (hematology-oncology) and director, Autologous Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation, Cell Therapy and Transplant Program, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania; and section chief, Multiple Myeloma, Division of Hematology/Oncology, Department of Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania,
Reena Sharma, MD, an adult metabolic consultant at Salford Royal Hospital
Nirav Shah, MD, MSHP, associate professor of medicine, at the Medical College of Wisconsin
Bhagirathbhai R. Dholaria, MD, an associate professor of medicine in malignant hematology & stem cell transplantation at Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Reena Sharma, MD, an adult metabolic consultant at Salford Royal Hospital
Mark Hamilton, MD, PhD, a hematology-oncology and bone marrow transplant (BMT) cell therapy fellow at Stanford University
Barry J Byrne, MD, PhD, the chief medical advisor of MDA and a physician-scientist at the University of Florida
© 2025 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.