Prospective Molecular Profiling of Circulating Tumor Cells from Patients with Melanoma Receiving Combinatorial Immunotherapy

Author:

Lin Selena Y1,Chang Shu-Ching2,Lam Stella1,Irene Ramos Romela1,Tran Kevin1,Ohe Shuichi1,Salomon Matthew P1,Bhagat Ali Asgar S3,Teck Lim Chwee3,Fischer Trevan D4,Foshag Leland J4,Boley Christine L5,O'Day Steven J5,Hoon Dave S B1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Translational Molecular Medicine, John Wayne Cancer Institute, Saint John's Health Center, PHS, Santa Monica, CA

2. Medical Data Research Center, Providence Saint Joseph Health, Portland, OR

3. Department of Biomedical Engineering and Department of Mechanical Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore

4. Department of Surgical Oncology, John Wayne Cancer Institute, PHS, Santa Monica, CA

5. Department of Immuno-Oncology and Clinical Research, John Wayne Cancer Institute, PHS, Santa Monica, CA

Abstract

AbstractBACKGROUNDBlood molecular profiling of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) can enable monitoring of patients with metastatic melanoma during checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy (CII) and in combination with targeted therapies. We developed a microfluidics-based CTC platform to explore CTC profiling utility in CII-treated patients with melanoma using a melanoma messenger RNA (mRNA)/DNA biomarker panel.METHODSBlood samples (n = 213) were collected prospectively from 75 American Joint Committee on Cancer-staged III/IV melanoma patients during CII treatment and those enriched for CTCs. CTC profiling was performed using 5 known melanoma mRNA biomarkers and BRAF V600E DNA mutation. CTC biomarker status associations with clinical outcomes were assessed.RESULTSCTCs were detected in 88% of blood samples from patients with melanoma. CTC-derived biomarkers and clinical variables analyzed using classification and regression tree analysis revealed that a combination of lactate dehydrogenase, CTC-mRNA biomarkers, and tumor BRAF–mutation status was indicative of clinical outcomes for patients with stage IV melanoma (n = 52). The panel stratified low-risk and high-risk patients, whereby the latter had poor disease-free (P = 0.03) and overall survival (P = 0.02). Incorporation of a DNA biomarker with mRNA profiling increased overall CTC-detection capability by 57% compared to mRNA profiling only. RNA sequencing of isolated CTCs identified significant catenin beta 1 (CTNNB1) overexpression (P <0.01) compared to nondisease donor blood. CTC-CTNNB1 was associated with progressive disease/stable disease compared to complete-responder patient status (P = 0.02). Serial CTC profiling identified subclinical disease in patients who developed progressive disease during treatment/follow-up.CONCLUSIONSCTC-derived mRNA/DNA biomarkers have utility for monitoring CII, targeted, and combinatorial therapies in metastatic melanoma patients.

Funder

Medical Research Foundation

National Institute of Health

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry

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