Association between PD1 mRNA and response to anti-PD1 monotherapy across multiple cancer types
Annals of Oncology 29(10): 2121-2128
Article 2018 English
Authors
LP
Laia Paré
TP
Tomás Pascual
ES
Elia Seguí
Abstract
2 min read
BackgroundWe hypothesized that the abundance of PD1 mRNA in tumor samples might explain the differences in overall response rates (ORR) observed following anti-PD1 monotherapy across cancer types.Patients and methodsRNASeqv2 data from 10078 tumor samples representing 34 different cancer types was analyzed from TCGA. Eighteen immune-related gene signatures and 547 immune-related genes, including PD1, were explored. Correlations between each gene/signature and ORRs reported in the literature following anti-PD1 monotherapy were calculated. To translate the in silico findings to the clinical setting, we analyzed the expression of PD1 mRNA using the nCounter platform in 773 formalin-fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) tumor samples across 17 cancer types. To test the direct relationship between PD1 mRNA, PDL1 immunohistochemistry (IHC), stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (sTILs) and ORR, we evaluated an independent FFPE-based dataset of 117 patients with advanced disease treated with anti-PD1 monotherapy.ResultsIn pan-cancer TCGA, PD1 mRNA expression was found strongly correlated (r > 0.80) with CD8 T-cell genes and signatures and the proportion of PD1 mRNA-high tumors (80th percentile) within a given cancer type was variable (0%–84%). Strikingly, the PD1-high proportions across cancer types were found strongly correlated (r = 0.91) with the ORR following anti-PD1 monotherapy reported in the literature. Lower correlations were found with other immune-related genes/signatures, including PDL1. Using the same population-based cutoff (80th percentile), similar proportions of PD1-high disease in a given cancer type were identified in our in-house 773 tumor dataset as compared with TCGA. Finally, the pre-established PD1 mRNA FFPE-based cutoff was found significantly associated with anti-PD1 response in 117 patients with advanced disease (PD1-high 51.5%, PD1-intermediate 26.6% and PD1-low 15.0%; odds ratio between PD1-high and PD1-intermediate/low = 8.31; P < 0.001). In this same dataset, PDL1 tumor expression by IHC or percentage of sTILs was not found associated with response.ConclusionsOur study provides a clinically applicable assay that links PD1 mRNA abundance, activated CD8 T-cells and anti-PD1 efficacy.
Laia Paré, Tomás Pascual, Elia Seguí, María González‐Cao, Cristina Teixidó, A. Rodríguez, Blanca González‐Farré, Míriam Cuatrecasas, Estela Pineda, Guillermo Crespo, Salvador Martín‐Algarra, Elisabeth Pérez-Ruíz, Begoña Mellado, Joan Maurel, Javier García Corbacho, Miguel Ángel Molina‐Vila, Josep M. Llovet, Noemı́ Reguart, Ana Arance, Aleix Prat
Philipp K. Haber, Miguel Torres‐Martín, Jean‐François Dufour, Chris Verslype, Jens U. Marquardt, Peter R. Galle, Arndt Vogel, Tim Meyer, Ismaïl Labgaa, Lewis R. Roberts, Beatriz Mínguez, Vincenzo Mazzaferro, Fabian Finkelmeier, Tobias Müller, Moritz Schmelzle, Richard S. Finn, Swan N. Thung, Augusto Villanueva, Daniela Sia, Josep M. Llovet
Zeynep Eroglu, Dae Won Kim, Douglas B. Johnson, Alain P. Algazi, Rodrigo Ramella Munhoz, Elizabeth Liniker, Ben L. Kong, Neharika Khurana, Bartosz Chmielowski, Jeffrey A. Sosman, Richard A Scolyer, Matteo S. Carlino, Michael A. Postow, Wen‐Jen Hwu, Georgina V. Long, Antoni Ribas
Elena Shklovskaya, Bernadette Pedersen, Ashleigh Stewart, Jack O. G. Simpson, Zizhen Ming, Mal Irvine, Richard A Scolyer, Georgina V. Long, Helen Rizos
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.