In follicular lymphoma, the treatment goal is durable remission with manageable toxicity, not necessarily a cure. Therefore, clinicians frequently prefer using a bispecific antibody first, reserving the more complex and toxic CAR-T cell therapy for transformed disease or after a bispecific fails.

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Clinicians must weigh the immediate benefit of using community-accessible belantumab against the risk of reducing the efficacy of future BCMA-targeted therapies like CAR-T or bispecifics. This decision hinges on a patient's ability to travel and access advanced care, creating a complex treatment sequencing challenge.

Data from J&J's Majestic 3 trial suggests its off-the-shelf bispecific combination could rival the efficacy of its own blockbuster CAR-T, Carvykti. This sets up an internal competition where a more accessible therapy could challenge a complex, personalized one in earlier lines of treatment.

Unlike some targeted therapies that lead to antigen loss, treatment with the CD19-directed antibody tafasitamab does not appear to eliminate CD19 expression on lymphoma cells. This is a critical finding, as it preserves the target for subsequent potent therapies like CD19-directed CAR T-cells.

Not all CD20-targeting bispecifics can be combined with rituximab. Mosunetuzumab binds the same epitope, causing competition. However, glofitamab and epcoritamab bind different epitopes, allowing for logical and potentially synergistic combinations with rituximab-based regimens.

BTK inhibitors like ibrutinib can improve T-cell function. When combined with liso-cel CAR-T, this synergistic effect dramatically improves outcomes in heavily pretreated patients, increasing the complete response rate from 20% to 45% and the overall response rate from 48% to 86%.

The future of medicine isn't about finding a single 'best' modality like CAR-T or gene therapy. Instead, it's about strategic convergence, choosing the right tool—be it a bispecific, ADC, or another biologic—based on the patient's specific disease stage and urgency of treatment.

Using a BCMA bispecific antibody first can exhaust a patient's T-cells or cause tumors to lose the BCMA target, rendering a subsequent BCMA-targeted CAR-T therapy ineffective. The optimal sequence is CAR-T first, which preserves T-cell function and BCMA expression, leaving bispecifics as a viable later-line option.

Despite new therapies for follicular lymphoma (FL), bendamustine-rituximab (BR) will likely remain the community standard due to its simplicity. This may create a growing gap in treatment approaches between academic centers using novel agents and community practices favoring the familiar BR regimen.

Rather than expecting cell therapies (CAR-T, TIL) to eradicate every cancer cell, Dr. Radvanyi reframes them as powerful adjuvants. Their role is to inflict initial damage, kill tumor cells, and release antigens, creating an opportunity to prime a broader, secondary immune response with other modalities like vaccines or checkpoint inhibitors.

Before initiating a CD20-targeting bispecific antibody in patients who have failed CAR-T therapy, a new biopsy is mandatory. Up to 30% of these patients experience CD20 antigen loss, which would render the bispecific therapy ineffective and necessitates choosing a drug with a different target.