Author:
de Miguel-Perez Diego,Russo Alessandro,Arrieta Oscar,Ak Murat,Barron Feliciano,Gunasekaran Muthukumar,Mamindla Priyadarshini,Lara-Mejia Luis,Peterson Christine B.,Er Mehmet E.,Peddagangireddy Vishal,Buemi Francesco,Cooper Brandon,Manca Paolo,Lapidus Rena G.,Hsia Ru-Ching,Cardona Andres F.,Naing Aung,Kaushal Sunjay,Hirsch Fred R.,Mack Philip C.,Serrano Maria Jose,Adamo Vincenzo,Colen Rivka R.,Rolfo Christian
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) changed the therapeutic landscape of patients with lung cancer. However, only a subset of them derived clinical benefit and evidenced the need to identify reliable predictive biomarkers. Liquid biopsy is the non-invasive and repeatable analysis of biological material in body fluids and a promising tool for cancer biomarkers discovery. In particular, there is growing evidence that extracellular vesicles (EVs) play an important role in tumor progression and in tumor-immune interactions. Thus, we evaluated whether extracellular vesicle PD-L1 expression could be used as a biomarker for prediction of durable treatment response and survival in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) undergoing treatment with ICIs.
Methods
Dynamic changes in EV PD-L1 were analyzed in plasma samples collected before and at 9 ± 1 weeks during treatment in a retrospective and a prospective independent cohorts of 33 and 39 patients, respectively.
Results
As a result, an increase in EV PD-L1 was observed in non-responders in comparison to responders and was an independent biomarker for shorter progression-free survival and overall survival. To the contrary, tissue PD-L1 expression, the commonly used biomarker, was not predictive neither for durable response nor survival.
Conclusion
These findings indicate that EV PD-L1 dynamics could be used to stratify patients with advanced NSCLC who would experience durable benefit from ICIs.
Funder
Center for Thoracic Oncology Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Borsa Dottorati XXXII FSE Ciclo Unime
NIH NCI
National Cancer Institute
Associazione Siciliana Sostegno Oncologico Onlus.
National Cancer Institute - Cancer Center Support
Merck Sharp and Dohme
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
54 articles.
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