Digital image analysis as an aid in the assessment of the combined positive score in ovarian carcinoma.

2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e14584-e14584
Author(s):  
Karina Kulangara ◽  
David Calcagno ◽  
Scott Boyer ◽  
Debra Ann Hanks ◽  
Holly Yamada

e14584 Background: Developing scoring methods for PD-L1 to identify patients who will respond effectively to anti-PD1 therapy is key in the development of companion and complementary diagnostic assays. The Combined Positive Score (CPS) is an elegant method for the evaluation of PD-L1 expression in solid tumors. CPS includes the number of PD-L1 positive cells (tumor, lymphocytes and macrophages) in relation to total tumor cells. The accurate manual capturing of total number of tumor cells can be a challenge to pathologists. Methods: Image analysis was used to evaluate possibledifferences in tumor density for well, moderately, and poorly differentiated ovarian epithelial serious carcinomas. Multiple regions of interest of 158 hematoxylin-stained specimens were analyzed. Algorithm parameters were systematically adjusted to minimize mean differences in tumor count relative to manually counted scores in small, user-selected regions of 33 representative specimens. Results: The average nuclei count ranged between 2000 and 7000 with ~50% falling between 4.0-5.5 x 103. Conclusions: Digital image analysis of nuclear quantification has been shown to be a useful tool to aid the pathologist with the correct assessment of the CPS score.

2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e14589-e14589 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karina Kulangara ◽  
Debra Ann Hanks ◽  
Stephanie Waldroup ◽  
Lindsay Peltz ◽  
Supriya Shah ◽  
...  

e14589 Background: Developing clinically relevant and highly reproducible scoring methods for PD-L1 to identify patients who will respond effectively to anti-PD-1 therapy is key in the development of companion or complementary diagnostic assays. Methods: Scoring method for PD-L1 IHC 22C3 pharmDx in NSCLC have only captured the percentage on stained tumor cells using the tumor proportion score (TPS) (Roach et al. 2016, Appl Immunohistochem Mol Morphol.) (Garon et al. 2015, N Engl J Med.). In the KN012 study 2 out of 11 responders to pembrolizumab were detected with the TPS for the gastric indication. More and more additional data indicate that in some tumor indications PD-L1 staining on both tumor and tumor-associated immune cells is associated with clinical outcome. Therefore a method evaluating both tumor and immune cells in one sitting using the combined positive score was evaluated. Results: Scoring the same patient specimens with the new combined positive score method resulted in the detection of 9 out of 11 responders. Our internal inter- and intra- observer data shows that the CPS can be scored reproducibly with an overall agreement point estimates of 93% for intra-observer and an overall agreement of 87.6% for inter-observer reproducibility in gastric carcinoma. Additionally, CPS builds on the scoring method for NSCLC as it shares the same denominator, namely total number of tumor cells. CPS is evaluated based on the number of PD-L1 positive cells (tumor, lymphocytes and macrophages) in relation to total tumor cells, and hence allows the capture of tumor and immune cells in a single read. Conclusions: Our data demonstrates that the CPS scoring method is reproducible when scored by pathologists and clinically relevant for a number of indications.


2000 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 7-9
Author(s):  
Yaser Natour ◽  
Christine Sapienza ◽  
Mark Schmalz ◽  
Savita Collins

2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gustav Stålhammar ◽  
Thonnie Rose O. See ◽  
Stephen Phillips ◽  
Stefan Seregard ◽  
Hans E. Grossniklaus

2008 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 192-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiromasa Tanaka ◽  
Gojiro Nakagami ◽  
Hiromi Sanada ◽  
Yunita Sari ◽  
Hiroshi Kobayashi ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A308-A308
Author(s):  
Lingkang Huang ◽  
Jared Lunceford ◽  
Junshui Ma ◽  
Kenneth Emancipator

BackgroundPD-L1 is expressed on both tumor and immune cells; however, the mechanism by which PD-L1 modulates the adaptive immune response on tumor versus immune cells may differ. Additionally, the prevalence of PD-L1 expression and the partitioning between tumor and immune compartments varies by tumor type. While PD-L1 expression on tumor or immune cells can be scored separately, the PD-L1 combined positive score (CPS) captures both tumor and immune cell expression in one aggregate score. We performed a retrospective, exploratory analysis of the effectiveness of CPS as an enrichment biomarker across several studies of pembrolizumab monotherapy in patients with multiple tumor types.MethodsPD-L1 expression was assessed using PD-L1 IHC 22C3 pharmDx. Expression was measured using CPS (defined as the number of PD-L1–staining cells [tumor cells, lymphocytes, macrophages] divided by the total number of tumor cells, multiplied by 100) in tumor samples from single-arm (KEYNOTE-052 [UC], KEYNOTE-059 cohort 1 [G/GEJ], KEYNOTE-086 [TNBC], KEYNOTE-158 [cervical; SCLC], KEYNOTE-180 [EC], KEYNOTE-224 [HCC], KEYNOTE-427 [RCC]) and randomized (KEYNOTE-040 [HNSCC], KEYNOTE-045 [UC], KEYNOTE-061 [G/GEJ], KEYNOTE-119 [TNBC], KEYNOTE-240 [HCC]) pembrolizumab studies. Data were pooled across tumor types for pembrolizumab and for standard-of-care (in controlled studies), and then estimates of response rate, prevalence, and receiver operating characteristics (ROC) analysis were performed over various CPS cutpoints. CPS distribution by response, tumor type, and line of therapy were also assessed.ResultsThere were 3769 treated patients with available PD-L1 CPS (pembrolizumab, n=2678; standard-of-care, n=1091). The area under the ROC curve for ORR was 0.63 (95% CI, 0.61–0.66) for pembrolizumab and 0.48 (95% CI, 0.43–0.53) for standard-of-care when a positive association was evaluated between CPS and ORR (figure 1); individual cutpoints of 1, 10, 20, and 50 were examined (table 1). Figure 2 shows a boxplot of CPS distribution for response in pembrolizumab-treated patients.Abstract 282 Table 1Response Rates and Sensitivity at Individual CPS Cutpoints for Pembrolizumab-Treated PatientsAbstract 282 Figure 1ROC analysis of PD-L1 CPS for pembrolizumab versus standard-of-care therapyAbstract 282 Figure 2Boxplot of PD-L1 CPS distribution for responders versus nonresponders in pembrolizumab-treated patients by tumor type and line of therapy in order of descending median CPSConclusionsThis retrospective, exploratory pan-tumor analysis demonstrates that CPS is an effective scoring method for measuring PD-L1 expression and can be used as a predictive biomarker to identify patients likely to respond to pembrolizumab monotherapy. CPS demonstrated enrichment of response to pembrolizumab monotherapy across most, but not all, tumor types, including some tumor types for which efficacy favors pembrolizumab regardless of PD-L1 expression, and for which a companion diagnostic is therefore not needed. In the randomized studies, CPS did not show a consistent association with ORR for standard-of-care therapy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Aristeidis A. Villias ◽  
Stefanos G. Kourtis ◽  
Hercules C. Karkazis ◽  
Gregory L. Polyzois

Abstract Background The replica technique with its modifications (negative replica) has been used for the assessment of marginal fit (MF). However, identification of the boundaries between prosthesis, cement, and abutment is challenging. The recently developed Digital Image Analysis Sequence (DIAS) addresses this limitation. Although DIAS is applicable, its reliability has not yet been proven. The purpose of this study was to verify the DIAS as an acceptable method for the quantitative assessment of MF at cemented crowns, by conducting statistical tests of agreement between different examiners. Methods One hundred fifty-one implant-supported experimental crowns were cemented. Equal negative replicas were produced from the assemblies. Each replica was sectioned in six parts, which were photographed under an optical microscope. From the 906 standardized digital photomicrographs (0.65 μm/pixel), 130 were randomly selected for analysis. DIAS included tracing the profile of the crown and the abutment and marking the margin definition points before cementation. Next, the traced and marked outlines were superimposed on each digital image, highlighting the components’ boundaries and enabling MF measurements. One researcher ran the analysis twice and three others once, independently. Five groups of 130 measurements were formed. Intra- and interobserver reliability was evaluated with intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Agreement was estimated with the standard error of measurement (SEM), the smallest detectable change at the 95% confidence level (SDC95%), and the Bland and Altman method of limits of agreement (LoA). Results Measured MF ranged between 22.83 and 286.58 pixels. Both the intra- and interobserver reliability were excellent, ICC = 1 at 95% confidence level. The intra- and interobserver SEM and SDC95% were less than 1 and 3 pixels, respectively. The Bland–Altman analysis presented graphically high level of agreement between the mean measurement of the first observer and each of the three other observers’ measurements. Differences between observers were normally distributed. In all three cases, the mean difference was less than 1 pixel and within ± 3 pixels LoA laid at least 95% of differences. T tests of the differences did not reveal any fixed bias (P > .05, not significant). Conclusion The DIAS is an objective and reliable method able to detect and quantify MF at ranges observed in clinical practice.


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