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HIT cell therapy eradicates solid tumors in preclinical models
news-medical.net
Published about 10 hours ago

HIT cell therapy eradicates solid tumors in preclinical models

news-medical.net · Feb 26, 2026 · Collected from GDELT

Summary

Published: 20260226T233000Z

Full Article

CAR T cell therapy has revolutionized the treatment of many blood cancers, but has shown little success against solid tumors, which account for over 85% of all cancers. Columbia researchers have now found that a new type of cell therapy-HIT cells, a cousin to CAR T with enhanced sensitivity-overcomes a major obstacle to treating solid tumors with cell therapy and can completely eliminate kidney, pancreatic, and ovarian cancers in mice. The research, conducted by investigators at the Columbia Initiative in Cell Engineering and Therapy (CICET), was published Feb. 26 in the journal Science. Michel Sadelain, director of CICET, pioneered today's CAR T therapies, which reprogram a patient's own immune cells to become trained assassins that seek and destroy the patient's cancer. For the past few years, his lab has also led the development of HIT cell therapy. "Curing solid tumors is not easy, but this work solves one piece of the puzzle," Sadelain says. The challenge of solid cancers Though several obstacles are known to thwart CAR T cell activity in solid cancers, the first challenge for any cell therapy is to locate every cancer cell. Blood cancer cells are usually easy for CAR T to spot, as each is covered with numerous CD19 molecules that act as a homing beacon for the CAR T cells. But in solid tumors, cancer cells are more diverse, and there is no single molecule that can serve as the sole target for cell therapy. "Some molecules have been identified that are found in 25%, 50%, or 75% of tumor cells, says Sadelain, who is also the Herbert and Florence Irving Professor of Medicine at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. "Though a therapy directed at those targets might be successful in eliminating some tumor cells, you can't cure somebody if you just eliminate a small fraction or even 90% of their tumor. You have to get down to the very last cell." CD70 marks many solid cancers The new study makes the surprising discovery that, for at least a few types of solid cancers, there is a molecule, CD70, that can act as a homing beacon for cell therapy. Related StoriesSingle-cell RNA sequencing reveals accelerated T cell aging in viral infectionsLong-term cola intake weakens immune cell counts in controlled rat studyShort-duration psychedelic therapy shows promise for major depression treatmentThough previous studies had suggested CD70 levels vary from cell to cell in a tumor, the study's lead author, Sophie Hanina, a research associate scientist at CICET, had a hunch those studies were missing cells that contained CD70 molecules, but at very low levels. She created new methods to detect the molecule, finding that CD70 levels vary widely on cancer cells, but that all cells have at least a few on their surfaces. Solid cancers need a harder HIT To translate that finding into a cell therapy, Hanina had to turn to a new type of cell therapy-HIT-under development in Sadelain's lab at CICET. Conventional CAR T cells can only detect cancer cells that possess a high level of the target molecule. Hanina saw that when she tested CD70 CAR T cells against solid tumors in the laboratory, explaining why CAR T therapies programmed to target CD70 have not performed well in patients with solid cancers. "HIT cells are the next generation of CAR T cells. They can be programmed like a CAR T cell, but they have the sensitivity of a natural T cell and can detect cancer cells that have only a vanishingly small number of target molecules," Hanina says. Hanina found that HIT cells programmed to target CD70 completely eradicated the tumors in mice with pancreatic, kidney, and ovarian cancers, while traditional conventional CAR T cells only eliminated a portion of cells. HIT cells also stayed clear of healthy cells in the mice, since most other cells in the body do not express CD70 molecules. Next step-clinical trials Hanina and Sadelain are now planning to test the CD70 HIT cells in patients with ovarian and other cancers at Columbia University Irving Medical Center. CD70 HIT cells may also have potential in nearly 20 other types of cancers, including glioblastoma and pancreaticadenocarcinoma, which are known to express CD70 to some degree. Though solid cancers present other obstacles to cell therapies, for cancers expressing CD70, the hunt for every cancer cell may be a critical obstacle to overcome. "Studies suggest that the escape of undetected cancer cells is the key impediment to therapeutic success with conventional CAR T therapy," says Hanina. "We hope our CD70-directed HIT cells help us find a way to eradicate the entire tumor." Source:Journal reference:


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