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Home NEWS Science News Cancer

UCLA Researchers Create Universal Single-Product Immunotherapy for Breast Cancer

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
October 22, 2025
in Cancer
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) has long posed a formidable challenge within oncology, notorious for its aggressive nature and limited treatment avenues. Unlike other breast cancer subtypes, TNBC lacks expression of estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors, and HER2 proteins, which have traditionally served as therapeutic targets for more personalized and effective treatment regimens. This absence of molecular targets renders TNBC notoriously difficult to treat, with patients often facing poor prognoses and limited survival outcomes. Recent advances led by researchers at UCLA have marked a pivotal breakthrough with the development of a novel immunotherapeutic strategy that could revolutionize the clinical approach to this lethal cancer variant.

At the heart of this innovation lies a sophisticated form of immunotherapy termed CAR-NKT cell therapy. Unlike conventional approaches that rely principally on CAR-T cells, which have shown remarkable success in hematological malignancies yet limited efficacy against solid tumors, this therapy employs invariant natural killer T (NKT) cells genetically engineered to express chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) specific to mesothelin, a cell surface protein abundantly expressed on TNBC cells. This engineered immune cell not only wields the specificity of CAR targeting but also harnesses the innate cytotoxic mechanisms of NKT cells, granting it enhanced versatility and potency against tumors.

This multipronged approach addresses the complex defense mechanisms of solid tumors. CAR-NKT cells utilize three independent yet complementary modalities to overcome tumor resilience. First, the engineered CAR receptor facilitates targeted recognition and elimination of mesothelin-expressing tumor cells, penetrating the often impenetrable tumor mass. Second, the natural killer receptors (NKRs) inherent to NKT cells recognize an extensive range of stress-induced ligands on malignant cells — over twenty molecular markers — thereby drastically reducing the likelihood of immune escape by the tumor through antigenic variation. Third, and perhaps most intriguingly, these CAR-NKT cells possess a unique T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire that modifies the tumor microenvironment by selectively depleting immunosuppressive cells, including regulatory T cells and myeloid-derived suppressor cells, recalibrating the immune landscape to favor tumor eradication.

Experimental validation using ex vivo human tumor samples from patients with advanced metastatic TNBC has demonstrated the robust cytolytic capacity of CAR-NKT cells, which consistently obliterated cancer cells across all tested samples. These findings underscore not only their potent antitumor efficacy but also their ability to dismantle the tumor’s immunosuppressive barriers, a feat that has eluded many prior immunotherapies. By directly eliminating the tumor’s protective shield, CAR-NKT cells re-enable endogenous immune components to participate more effectively in tumor clearance.

The implications of this technology extend beyond therapeutic efficacy to practical accessibility and scalability. Current autologous CAR-T therapies require harvesting and engineering patient-specific cells, processes that are prohibitively expensive and time-consuming, often costing hundreds of thousands of dollars per treatment and necessitating a critical delay unsuitable for rapidly progressing malignancies. In contrast, the UCLA team’s innovation leverages cord blood-derived CD34⁺ hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) to mass-produce universal CAR-NKT cells in a scalable ex vivo manufacturing system. This strategy allows for the creation of an “off-the-shelf” cellular product that is immediately available, drastically reducing both cost and time-to-treatment to an estimated $5,000 per dose, potentially democratizing access to life-saving immunotherapies worldwide.

This platform’s universality is grounded in the intrinsic biology of NKT cells, which exhibit a degree of immune system compatibility across unrelated recipients. This critical attribute enables the creation of a universal donor-derived cell bank, sidestepping the immunological complications and graft-versus-host disease risks associated with allogeneic cell transplantation. The logistical advantages, combined with the multipronged immune targeting capability, position CAR-NKT therapy as a paradigm-shifting modality for not only TNBC but also other visceral malignancies.

Indeed, mesothelin’s expression is not confined to TNBC alone; it is prominently present in ovarian, pancreatic, and lung cancers, which collectively represent a significant subset of treatment-resistant solid tumors. As a result, the CAR-NKT cell platform holds substantial potential as a versatile immunotherapeutic that could tackle a broad spectrum of cancers with dire unmet clinical needs. This broad applicability amplifies its significance and potential impact on oncological practice.

As the preclinical data solidifies, the UCLA research team is advancing toward submission of investigational new drug applications to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to initiate first-in-human clinical trials. These trials will critically evaluate safety, dosing, and efficacy in patients, marking the final step before this transformative therapy can enter clinical practice. If clinical performance mirrors preclinical promise, CAR-NKT cell therapy may inaugurate a new era of accessible, effective immunotherapy for some of the most challenging cancers to treat.

The scientific community and patients alike will be watching closely as this technology progresses toward translation. The ingenuity of combining engineered CAR specificity with the natural killer and T cell receptor repertoire of NKT cells exemplifies the cutting edge of immune engineering. This multifaceted assault on cancer, in conjunction with a scalable production model, redefines the contours of cancer immunotherapy by merging precision medicine with universal applicability.

Moreover, the strategy addresses several limitations inherent in current immunotherapies such as tumor antigen heterogeneity, immune evasion, prohibitive cost, and manufacturing bottlenecks. By overcoming these barriers, CAR-NKT cell therapy not only expands on the successes of CAR-T therapies but also charts a course for the next generation of cellular treatments for solid tumors.

In essence, the work by the UCLA team represents a beacon of hope for patients battling TNBC— a cancer subtype that has languished without effective targeted treatments. The convergence of immunology and synthetic biology in this innovative platform heralds a future where even the most formidable cancers can be targeted with precision, potency, and practicality.

As this research advances into clinical testing, it offers a potent reminder of the power of immune-based interventions to revolutionize cancer care and transform patient outcomes.

Subject of Research: Human tissue samples

Article Title: Targeting triple-negative breast cancer using cord-blood CD34⁺ HSPC-derived mesothelin-specific CAR-NKT cells with potent antitumor activity

News Publication Date: 13-Oct-2025

Web References:
https://jhoonline.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13045-025-01736-9

References:
DOI: 10.1186/s13045-025-01736-9

Image Credits:
Lili Yang Lab/UCLA

Keywords:
Breast cancer, Immune cells, Immunotherapy, Cell therapies

Tags: cancer survival outcomes and prognosesCAR-NKT cell therapy innovationchallenges in oncology treatmentengineered immune cells for cancermesothelin-targeted cancer therapyNKT cells in cancer therapynovel immunotherapeutic strategiespersonalized medicine in breast cancersolid tumors immunotherapy advancementstriple negative breast cancer treatmentUCLA breast cancer research breakthroughsuniversal immunotherapy for breast cancer

Tags: CAR-NKT cell therapymesothelin-targeted therapyoff-the-shelf cellular therapytriple-negative breast cancertriple-negative breast cancer treatmentUCLA cancer researchuniversal immunotherapy
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