Abstract 382: Longitudinal C-reactive protein (CRP) as an individualized dynamic predictor for metastatic cancer patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors: Findings from the prospective ST-ICI cohort

Author(s):  
Jian-Guo Zhou ◽  
Hu Ma ◽  
Udo Gaipl ◽  
Benjamin Frey ◽  
Markus Hecht ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A31-A31
Author(s):  
Abdul Rafeh Naqash ◽  
Alessio Cortellini ◽  
Emma Mi ◽  
Sanna Livanainen ◽  
Daria Gramenitskaya ◽  
...  

BackgroundCRP is an acute-phase protein produced primarily in response to interleukin IL-6 via transcriptional activation of the STAT3. Recent data have provided mechanistic insights into the immune suppressive role of elevated CRP by elucidating its influence on effector T-cell function and antigen presentation.1 Furthermore, melanoma patients in Checkmate-064 and 067 with high baseline and on-treatment CRP were seen to have a lower response rate and shorter survival to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs).2 Given these observations, we sought to evaluate the role of CRP as a prognostic biomarker in advanced NSCLC treated with ICIs from a multi-center international cohort.MethodsBetween 2015–2019, 420 adult patients with advanced NSCLC treated with ICIs alone or with concurrent chemotherapy (Chemo-ICI) were identified at four (1 US and 3 European) academic centers. CRP level in peripheral blood samples collected up to 2 weeks before starting ICI based treatments was considered as baseline. Based on previously validated data, a CRP cutoff of 10 mg/l was used to define CRP-normal (CRP-N) and CRP-high (CRP-H). Association of baseline CRP with median progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method and multivariate proportional hazards regression adjusted for multiple variables.ResultsBaseline CRP value was available in 75.5% of patients, with 66% having CRP-H. The median CRP was 21.0 mg/l. Single-agent nivolumab (44%) and Chemo-ICI (33.3%) were the two most common therapies. CRP-H showed a trend for stronger association with squamous histology (73.7% vs 63.3%; p= 0.063) and female sex (70.8 vs 60.0%; p=0.062) but did not show an association with PD-L1 status (0%, 1–49%, or ≥50%). Patients with CRP-H had a lower objective response rate compared with patients with CRP-N (26.9% vs. 47.6% PR; p=0.029). Compared to those with CRP-N (figure 1), patients with CRP-H had a significantly shorter median PFS [3.9 vs. 6.6 months, HR 1.41 95% CI: (1.07–1.86); p=0.0138] and OS (8.6 vs. 14.8 months, HR 1.55 95% CI [1.13- 2.14]; p=0.0060). In Cox regression analysis, CRP-H was again found to be independently associated with shorter median PFS and OS.ConclusionsThis is the largest international real-world dataset demonstrating significantly inferior outcomes associated with CRP > 10 mg/l in NSCLC patients treated with ICI based therapies. The potential influence of the immune suppressive effects of elevated CRP and IL-6 on the anti-tumor efficacy of ICIs needs prospective evaluation and could potentially be exploited as a therapeutic avenue in NSCLC.Abstract 32 Figure 1Kaplan-Meier Curves with 95% CI for PFS and OSSignificantly inferior median PFS and OS were seen for patients with CRP-H vs. CRP-N.AcknowledgementsSusan Eubanks and Sue-Ann Joyner at the ECU IRB for their help and support.Ethics ApprovalThe primary IRB approval for this study was conducted under an ECU (P-MAIT- UMCIRB-15-001400). Individual approval was also obtained from the respective IRB of each participating institution.ReferencesYoshida T, Ichikawa J, Giuroiu I, et al. C reactive protein impairs adaptive immunity in immune cells of patients with melanoma. Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer 2020.Weber, et al. Journal of Clinical Oncology37, no. 15_suppl (May 20, 2019) 100–100


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