Cell therapies have transformed immuno-oncology and regenerative medicine, with autologous CAR-T therapies being the most recognized for their clinical efficacy. However, the need for fast, scalable, and cost-effective treatments has driven the development of “off-the-shelf” cell therapies, also known as allogeneic or universal therapies. These approaches aim to overcome the limitations of autologous therapies by providing cells ready for multiple patients, reducing production time, and increasing product consistency.
Autologous therapies, derived from the patient’s own cells, offer high compatibility and low immunogenicity. However, they require individualized manufacturing, leading to significant delays and high costs.
Allogeneic therapies use donor cells, which are immediately available. This allows rapid access, although they carry a higher risk of immune rejection and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). Universal therapies take this further by combining genetic editing to remove or modify HLA antigens and immunogenic receptors. This creates cells capable of evading the immune response and being administered to multiple patients without significant rejection.
The main challenge for “off-the-shelf” therapies is the host immune response. To mitigate this, researchers apply advanced HLA editing strategies, such as knocking out HLA class I/II and expressing NK-inhibitory molecules like HLA-E. These modifications allow therapeutic cells to remain functional without being rapidly eliminated.
Additionally, TCR receptor editing and removal of allogeneic antigens create “invisible” cells to the immune system while maintaining their cytotoxic or regenerative capacity.
Currently, there are allogeneic and universal candidates in Phase I and II trials, primarily in hematology and solid tumors. Preliminary results indicate that it is possible to:
Nevertheless, researchers still need to conduct long-term studies to assess cell persistence, toxicity, and adverse events associated with immune evasion.
The main challenges include:
The combination of advanced cellular engineering and immune evasion strategies promises to overcome current limitations and open new opportunities in immunotherapy and regenerative medicine.
The following infographic summarizes the comparison:
| Characteristic | Autologous | Allogeneic | Universal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cell Source | Patient | Donor | Genetically modified / engineered lines |
| Production Time | Weeks | Days | Days |
| Risk of Rejection | Minimal | High | Controlled by HLA editing |
| Immune Evasion | Not required | Limited | Optimized (HLA-KO, HLA-E, TCR-KO) |
| Scalability | Low | Medium | High |