The FDA believes that the benefit of CAR-T therapies continues to outweigh their risks amid an ongoing investigation on cases of second blood cancers developing in patients who receive the cell therapies, according to senior FDA official Peter Marks.
The FDA is now investigating 22 cases of blood cancer developing after CAR-T cell therapy treatment, said Marks, the director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, on Monday at an Alliance for Regenerative Medicine event. “Although sequencing is not available for all of them, in at least a few of the cases we know that the CAR construct is in the malignant clone, which really suggests that there was probably an association there,” Marks said.
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