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Serum PD-1 Is Elevated after Pembrolizumab Treatment but Has No Predictive Value.

Authors :
Music M
Iafolla MAJ
Ren AH
Soosaipillai A
Prassas I
Diamandis EP
Source :
Molecular cancer therapeutics [Mol Cancer Ther] 2019 Oct; Vol. 18 (10), pp. 1844-1851. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Jul 30.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Immune-checkpoint blockade (ICB) uses antibody targeting of specific inhibitory receptors and ligands. The major limitations of ICB, such as high cost, limited success rate, and immune-related adverse events (irAE), highlight the need for predictive biomarkers. We analyzed pre-immunotherapy and post-immunotherapy serum samples of 24 patients treated with pembrolizumab for changes in PD-1 and over 1,000 additional protein markers using a multiplex proximity extension assay (PEA) to identify potential predictive biomarkers of response and/or toxicity. Candidates were selected based on the criteria that at least 2 patients within any of 3 patient groups (responders without irAEs, responders with irAEs, or nonresponders with irAEs) had either a ≥4-fold increase or 4-fold decrease in expression post-immunotherapy. Female and male control samples were used as technical duplicates. A patient group with no response and no irAEs was used to exclude candidates. Following treatment with pembrolizumab, there was a relative increase of PD-1 in the serum of all patients, compared with controls (average 4.4-fold). We identified 7 additional serum proteins that met our candidate selection criteria. These candidate markers did not have any significant association with response or toxicity to pembrolizumab. Overall, we show that serum PD-1 increases post-therapy with pembrolizumab treatment but has no predictive value for response or toxicity in this small set of patients.<br /> (©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1538-8514
Volume :
18
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Molecular cancer therapeutics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31363009
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-19-0132