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Serum Proteomics and Plasma Fibulin-3 in Differentiation of Mesothelioma From Asbestos-Exposed Controls and Patients With Other Pleural Diseases

Authors :
John G. Edwards
Matthew Neilson
Davand Sharma
Fiona T. Thomson
Carol McCormick
Caroline Kelly
Euan J. Cameron
Seamus Grundy
Stephen R. L. Clark
Samantha Hinsley
David Breen
Angela Wright
Dipak Mukherjee
Crispin J. Miller
Rachel Ostroff
Alan Hart-Thomas
J Holme
Mohammed Munavvar
Ioannis Psallidas
Giles Cox
Holly Hall
Rakesh Panchal
Nick A Maskell
Rehan Naseer
Matthew Evison
Leigh Alexander
Laura Alexander
Mahendran Chetty
Alina Ionescu
S. Tsim
Elankumaran Paramasivam
Kevin G. Blyth
Ann Shaw
Douglas Grieve
Anthony J. Chalmers
C Daneshvar
Source :
Journal of Thoracic Oncology
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Introduction:\ud Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is difficult to diagnose. An accurate blood biomarker could prompt specialist referral or be deployed in future screening. In earlier retrospective studies, SOMAscan proteomics (Somalogic, Boulder, CO) and fibulin-3 seemed highly accurate, but SOMAscan has not been validated prospectively and subsequent fibulin-3 data have been contradictory.\ud \ud Methods:\ud A multicenter prospective observational study was performed in 22 centers, generating a large intention-to-diagnose cohort. Blood sampling, processing, and diagnostic assessment were standardized, including a 1-year follow-up. Plasma fibulin-3 was measured using two enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (CloudClone [used in previous studies] and BosterBio, Pleasanton, CA). Serum proteomics was measured using the SOMAscan assay. Diagnostic performance (sensitivity at 95% specificity, area under the curve [AUC]) was benchmarked against serum mesothelin (Mesomark, Fujirebio Diagnostics, Malvern, PA). Biomarkers were correlated against primary tumor volume, inflammatory markers, and asbestos exposure.\ud \ud Results:\ud A total of 638 patients with suspected pleural malignancy (SPM) and 110 asbestos-exposed controls (AECs) were recruited. SOMAscan reliably differentiated MPM from AECs (75% sensitivity, 88.2% specificity, validation cohort AUC 0.855) but was not useful in patients with differentiating non-MPM SPM. Fibulin-3 (by BosterBio after failed CloudClone validation) revealed 7.4% and 11.9% sensitivity at 95% specificity in MPM versus non-MPM SPM and AECs, respectively (associated AUCs 0.611 [0.557–0.664], p = 0.0015) and 0.516 [0.443–0.589], p = 0.671), both inferior to mesothelin. SOMAscan proteins correlated with inflammatory markers but not with asbestos exposure. Neither biomarker correlated with tumor volume.\ud \ud Conclusions:\ud SOMAscan may prove useful as a future screening test for MPM in asbestos-exposed persons. Neither fibulin-3 nor SOMAscan should be used for diagnosis or pathway stratification.

Details

ISSN :
15560864
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Thoracic Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b67306584ec865a096c53739cd9afb0c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtho.2021.05.018