Updated
Updated · The Hindu · May 26
CAR-T Therapy Clears Phase 2 in Autoimmune Disease, Delivering 1.5- to 2-Year Remission
Updated
Updated · The Hindu · May 26

CAR-T Therapy Clears Phase 2 in Autoimmune Disease, Delivering 1.5- to 2-Year Remission

7 articles · Updated · The Hindu · May 26
  • Phase 2 trials of CAR-T therapy in severe autoimmune diseases including lupus and inflammatory myositis have finished, with studies reporting prolonged remission after a single infusion in some refractory patients.
  • The treatment works by engineering a patient’s T-cells to eliminate rogue B-cells, aiming to reset the immune system rather than maintain years of broad immunosuppression with steroids, methotrexate or biologics.
  • Early studies in Europe, especially Germany, found some lupus, myositis and multiple sclerosis patients stayed symptom-free for more than a year and in some cases could stop continuous immunosuppressive drugs.
  • Safety and durability still limit wider use: CAR-T can cause cytokine release syndrome, neurological complications and requires conditioning chemotherapy, while remission now appears to last about 1.5 to 2 years before relapse may occur.
  • Autoimmune disorders affect about 1 in 10 people globally, but CAR-T remains costly and limited to specialized centers, pushing research toward repeat dosing and cheaper off-the-shelf products.
CAR-T therapy offers an autoimmune 'reset,' but who will actually be able to afford this revolutionary cure?
Could a future CAR-T treatment be a simple injection, creating custom disease-fighting cells directly inside your body?
By 'rebooting' the immune system to cure one disease, are we risking the emergence of entirely new long-term health problems?

CAR-T’s Breakthrough in Autoimmune Disease: From Cancer Cure to Immune Reset and Next-Generation Therapies

Overview

CAR-T cell therapy, first approved for aggressive leukemia and known for inducing long-term remission in cancer patients, is now showing promise as a groundbreaking treatment for severe autoimmune diseases. Unlike traditional therapies, CAR-T targets and eliminates the specific immune cells responsible for autoimmune attacks, offering the potential for durable, drug-free remission. By applying CAR-T earlier in the disease course, complications from years of ineffective treatments can be prevented, halting disease progression, averting organ damage, and restoring patients’ quality of life. Remarkable cases, such as a woman cured of multiple rare autoimmune diseases, highlight its potential to address even the most complex, treatment-resistant conditions.

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