While a wide variety of folks have been gettin' folks fired up about the presence or absence of PD-L1 expression in relation to response to immunotherapy (checkpoint inhibitors)...there's this:
Predicting
response to checkpoint inhibitors in melanoma beyond PD-L1 and
mutational burden. Morrison, Pabla, Conroy, et al. J
Immunother Cancer. 2018 May 9.
Immune
checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have changed the clinical management of
melanoma. However, not all patients respond, and current biomarkers
including PD-L1 and mutational burden show incomplete predictive
performance. The clinical validity and utility of complex biomarkers
have not been studied in melanoma.
Cutaneous
metastatic melanoma patients at eight institutions were evaluated for
PD-L1 expression, CD8+ T-cell infiltration pattern,
mutational burden, and 394 immune transcript expression. PD-L1 IHC
and mutational burden were assessed for association with overall
survival (OS) in 94 patients treated prior to ICI approval by the FDA
(historical-controls), and in 137 patients treated with ICIs.
Unsupervised analysis revealed distinct immune-clusters with separate
response rates. This comprehensive immune profiling data were then
integrated to generate a continuous Response Score (RS) based upon
response criteria (RECIST v.1.1). RS was developed using a single
institution training cohort (n = 48) and subsequently tested in a
separate eight institution validation cohort (n = 29) to mimic a
real-world clinical scenario.
PD-L1
positivity greater than or equal to 1% correlated with response and OS
in ICI-treated patients, but demonstrated limited predictive
performance. High mutational burden was associated with response in
ICI-treated patients, but not with OS. Comprehensive immune profiling
using RS demonstrated higher sensitivity (72.2%) compared to PD-L1
IHC (34.25%) and tumor mutational burden (32.5%), but with similar
specificity.In this study, the response score derived from comprehensive immune profiling in a limited melanoma cohort showed improved predictive performance as compared to PD-L1 IHC and tumor mutational burden.
Clearly, the presence of PD-L1 on your tumor is not the end all be all in determining response to immunotherapy. Would that it were that simple! But, y'all know melanoma don't play that way!! Hang in there ratties! - c
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