scholarly journals 1332P Prognostic value of baseline and dynamic change value of CTC in advanced NSCLC patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitor-based therapy

2020 ◽  
Vol 31 ◽  
pp. S857-S858
Author(s):  
G. Gao ◽  
J. Li ◽  
F. Zhou ◽  
W. Li ◽  
A. Xiong ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A495-A495
Author(s):  
David Saltman ◽  
Nicole Croteau ◽  
Heather Lockyer ◽  
Rob Seitz ◽  
Frank McMahon ◽  
...  

BackgroundLung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. The advent of ICIs specifically targeting programmed cell death protein-1 (PD-1), or its ligand (PD-L1) represents a major therapeutic advance that is now included in standard of care regimens for non-small-cell-lung cancer (NSCLC). PD-L1 expression measured by immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining is the current gold standard predictive biomarker for immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy in NSCLC, however many factors beyond PD-L1 expression alone affect the outcome of ICI therapy. Evaluation of other factors to better inform clinical practice will reduce both the potential for adverse immune-related toxicities and expenditure on ineffective costly therapies while potentially identifying patients otherwise missed by PD-L1 staining. The 27-gene IO assay is a RT-qPCR based gene expression panel1 that was developed to classify the tumor immune microenvironment (TIME). It has been shown to be associated with response to ICI therapy in multiple tumor types including triple negative breast cancer, metastatic urothelial carcinoma, and NSCLC where the association was independent of PD-L1 status in patients treated either with monotherapy or combination therapy.2 Currently, BC Cancer measures PD-L1 status by IHC using the PD-L1 22C3 PharmDx assay and reports the tumor proportional score (TPS) to inform clinical decision. Patients with a TPS ≥ 50% may be eligible for first-line treatment with ICI monotherapy and those with < 50% TPS are eligible for second line or later ICI monotherapy. We established this retrospective study of ICI monotherapy treated NSCLC patients to assess the 27-gene IO assay as an informative biomarker for NSCLC ICI treatment decisions.MethodsThis retrospective study is utilizing the BC Cancer Study Database to select approximately 150 patients with stage IIIB or IV NSCLC treated with single-agent ICI therapy across four BC Cancer centers from 2017 forward (figure 1). Patients are selected based on availability of adequate biopsy specimens (FFPE with at least 20% tumor content), availability of PD-L1 IHC results or sufficient tissue to conduct staining, and for whom outcome data is available via chart review. RNA from patient samples is isolated from FFPE biopsies (either primary or metastatic sites) and those that yield ≥50ng RNA will be analyzed by the 27-gene IO assay 1 to derive IO scores (IO positive or IO negative) based on previously defined thresholds.3 The association between patient outcomes on ICI monotherapy and IO scores and PD-L1 IHC will be reported and compared.Abstract 466 Figure 1Schematic representation of patient workflow forReferencesSaltman, A, et al. Prostate cancer biomarkers and multiparametric MRI: is there a role for both in prostate cancer management? Ther Adv Urol 2021;13: 1756287221997186.Ranganath HJA, Smith JR, et al. One-year progression-free survival in lung cancer patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors is significantly associated with a novel immunomodulatory signature but not PD-L1 staining. in SITC. Journal Immunotherapy Cancer. 2019.Nielsen, TJ, et al. A novel immuno-oncology algorithm measuring tumor microenvironment to predict response to immunotherapies. Heliyon 2021;7(3):e06438.Ethics ApprovalThe University of British Columba BC Cancer Research Ethics Board Chair, Vice-Chair or second Vice-Chair, has reviewed the above described research project, including associated documentation, and finds the research project acceptable on ethical grounds for research involving human subjects. All participants have provided informed consent before taking part in the study. REB Number H20-02635.


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e15049-e15049
Author(s):  
Paul R. Walker ◽  
Mark Bowling ◽  
Nitika Sharma ◽  
Praveen Namireddy ◽  
Teresa Parent ◽  
...  

e15049 Background: Programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) protein expression by immunohistochemical staining (IHC) correlates with response to immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapies in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Tumor mutational burden (TMB) is another immune biomarker of ICI response in NSCLC. Clinical studies indicate tissue PD-L1 protein expression and TMB are independent yet complementary. Both are limited by tissue acquisition and potential heterogeneity. Plasma cell free PD-L1 RNA (cfRNA) levels and tissue protein PD-L1 expression and TMB was analyzed and correlated in patients with advanced NSCLC. Methods: Patients with advanced NSCLC underwent complementary plasma and tissue next generation sequencing (NGS) with immune biomarkers prior to treatment. Plasma PD-L1 cfRNA was assessed by the Circulogene proprietary direct-on-specimen enrichment technology NGS platform. Correlating tissue testing was performed by the Caris Molecular Intelligence platform with the anti-PD-L1 22C3 IHC antibody and TMB measuring the total number of non-synonymous somatic mutations per megabase. Results: 107 patients with advanced NSCLC were evaluated with simultaneous plasma and tissue NGS testing. 17% (95% confidence interval [CI] 10-24%) patients plasma PD-L1 positive. 48.5% (CI 38-57%) tissue IHC PD-L1 positive. 7 of 18 plasma PD-L1 positive patients were tissue PD-L1 negative. 48% (CI 39-58%) total patients TMB ≥ 10 mutations per megabase (TMB high). Correlating TMB high in 72% (CI 50-94%) of plasma PD-L1 positive and 56% (CI 42-69%) of tissue PD-L1 positive patients. TMB high in 49% (CI 37-59%) plasma PD-L1 negative and 50% (CI 35-65%) tissue PD-L1 negative patients. Conclusions: Although less frequent than tissue PD-L1 protein expression, plasma PD-L1 cfRNA expression correlated with a higher association of tissue TMB high findings than tissue PD-L1 positive patients. There was not any TMB high difference between plasma PD-L1 negative and tissue PD-L1 negative patients. Over one-third of plasma PD-L1 positive patients were tissue PD-L1 negative. Clinical correlation with immune checkpoint inhibitor therapies is ongoing.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laetitia Douguet ◽  
Serena Janho dit Hreich ◽  
Jonathan Benzaquen ◽  
Laetitia Seguin ◽  
Thierry Juhel ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTOnly a subpopulation of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients responds to immunotherapies, highlighting the urgent need to develop new therapeutic strategies to improve patient outcome. We developed a new chemical positive modulator (HEI3090) of the purinergic P2RX7 receptor that potentiates αPD-1 treatment to effectively control the growth of lung tumors in transplantable and oncogene-induced mouse models and triggers long lasting antitumor immune responses. Mechanistically, the molecule stimulates dendritic P2RX7 expressing cells to generate IL-18 which leads to the production of IFN-γ by Natural Killer and CD4+ T cells within tumors. Combined with immune checkpoint inhibitor, the molecule induces a complete tumor regression in 80% of LLC tumor bearing mice. Cured mice are also protected against tumor re-challenge due to a CD8-dependent protective response. Hence, combination treatment of small-molecule P2RX7 activator followed by immune checkpoint inhibitor represents a promising novel strategy that may be active against NSCLC.


2017 ◽  
Vol 142 (6) ◽  
pp. 1277-1284 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesco Passiglia ◽  
Antonio Galvano ◽  
Sergio Rizzo ◽  
Lorena Incorvaia ◽  
Angela Listì ◽  
...  

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