A small but striking clinical trial out of Germany has put five people with severe lupus into full remission using a therapy that reprograms their own immune cells — and none of them have needed lupus medication since. The results, published in Nature Medicine in 2022 C.E., are being called a potential turning point not just for lupus, but for the broader category of autoimmune disease.
At a glance
- CAR T-cell therapy: Doctors at Friedrich-Alexander University in Erlangen-Nuremberg collected T-cells from five lupus patients, genetically modified them to target rogue B cells, and reinfused them — effectively resetting the immune system.
- Lupus remission: All five patients — four women and one man, aged 18 to 24 — became disease-free, with severe symptoms including arthritis, lung inflammation, and heart valve fibrosis clearing up after treatment.
- Autoimmune disease potential: Lead researcher Prof. Georg Schett said the approach could extend to rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, myositis, and systemic sclerosis — conditions that affect hundreds of millions of people worldwide.
What CAR T-cell therapy actually does
CAR T-cell therapy was first used to treat a leukemia patient in 2015 C.E. Since then, it has reshaped how medicine approaches certain blood cancers. The basic idea: extract a patient’s own T-cells, engineer them in a lab to recognize and destroy a specific target, then put them back in.
In this trial, the target was B cells. In lupus patients, B cells malfunction and produce autoantibodies — proteins that attack the body’s own healthy tissue instead of external threats. By programming T-cells to eliminate those B cells, the German team essentially cleared out the source of the attack.
Here’s what made the results especially surprising: about four months after treatment, the patients’ B cells grew back. But the new B cells no longer produced the harmful autoantibodies. The research team described this as a “rebooting of the immune system” — a phrase that sounds like science fiction but appears, in these five cases, to describe something real.
Why lupus has been so hard to treat
Lupus, or systemic lupus erythematosus, affects roughly one in 1,000 people — and disproportionately affects women, particularly women of color, who face higher rates of severe disease. It develops when the immune system turns against the body’s own tissues and organs, potentially damaging the heart, lungs, kidneys, and brain.
The disease is notoriously difficult to diagnose. Symptoms flare and subside unpredictably, often mimicking other conditions. For many patients, existing treatments — including steroids and immunosuppressants — manage symptoms without achieving true remission, and come with significant side effects over time.
All five patients in this trial had severe, treatment-resistant lupus. They received the CAR T-cell therapy only after other approaches had failed. That context matters: this wasn’t a first-line treatment tested in mild cases. These were people running out of options.
A door opening for other conditions
“We are very excited about these results,” said Prof. Schett, the rheumatologist who led the work. “Several other autoimmune diseases which are dependent on B cells and show autoantibodies may respond to this treatment.”
Dr. Rahul Roychoudhuri, who studies immune regulation at the University of Cambridge, called it “an excellent study” with strong implications beyond cancer. “I am very excited at the prospects for this form of living therapy in indications beyond cancer,” he said.
The team also checked whether the therapy compromised patients’ broader immune function — a legitimate concern whenever you’re reengineering the immune system. They tested antibody responses to multiple vaccines, including measles, rubella, hepatitis B, and tetanus, before and after treatment. The patients’ immune responses remained essentially intact, suggesting the therapy targeted only the malfunctioning cells without disabling normal immunity.
That finding is important. One of the persistent challenges with aggressive autoimmune treatments is leaving patients vulnerable to infection. If CAR T-cell therapy can achieve remission without that tradeoff, it changes the risk-benefit calculation significantly.
What still needs to happen
Five patients is a tiny sample. This was an early-phase study, not a randomized controlled trial, and no one is claiming a cure yet. Lupus affects millions of people globally, and CAR T-cell therapy currently requires specialized facilities and carries substantial costs — meaning access will be a serious challenge even if larger trials confirm the results. Researchers at University Hospital Erlangen and collaborators are working to understand how durable the remission will be over years, not just months.
But the signal is clear enough to warrant serious attention. The journal Nature Medicine, where the study was published in September 2022 C.E., is among the most rigorous peer-reviewed outlets in biomedicine. And the mechanism — using the immune system’s own architecture to correct itself — has already proven itself in cancer.
For the estimated 1.5 million Americans and 5 million people worldwide living with lupus, and the far larger populations living with other B-cell-driven autoimmune conditions, this trial represents something rare: a result that genuinely warrants the excitement it’s generating.
Read more
For more on this story, see: The Guardian
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- U.K. cancer death rates drop to their lowest level on record
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- The Good News for Humankind archive on global health
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