There is some data on the use of bispecific antibodies after receipt of CAR T-cell therapy. Now, the caveat here is that that data has been generated in patients who’ve relapsed many times over. But what we see is that if you change target, that seems to be a preferred pathway. In other words, if you get a BCMA target CAR T-cell therapy, the BCMA bispecific antibody subsequently doesn’t perform so well...
There is some data on the use of bispecific antibodies after receipt of CAR T-cell therapy. Now, the caveat here is that that data has been generated in patients who’ve relapsed many times over. But what we see is that if you change target, that seems to be a preferred pathway. In other words, if you get a BCMA target CAR T-cell therapy, the BCMA bispecific antibody subsequently doesn’t perform so well. That said, talquetamab performs quite well after relapse from BCMA CAR T-cell therapy with a median progression-free survival of 13 months in heavily pretreated patients, which is just as good as those patients who have not gotten CAR T-cell therapy. So another nice space for, say, for example, talquetamab and daratumumab would be a patient who’s relapsing after a BCMA targeted CAR T-cell therapy.
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