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e-Article

Detection of PD-L1 in circulating tumor cells and white blood cells from patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer.
Document Type
Article
Source
Annals of Oncology. Jan2018, Vol. 29 Issue 1, p193-199. 7p. 2 Color Photographs, 3 Graphs.
Subject
*MEMBRANE proteins
*LEUCOCYTES
*CANCER cells
*NON-small-cell lung carcinoma
*CANCER treatment
*PROTEIN expression
Language
ISSN
0923-7534
Abstract
Background: Expression of PD-L1 in tumor cells and tumor-infiltrating immune cells has been associated with improved efficacy to anti-PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors in patients with advanced-stage non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and emerged as a potential biomarker for the selection of patients to cancer immunotherapies. We investigated the utility of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) and circulating white blood cells (WBCs) as a noninvasive method to evaluate PD-L1 status in advanced NSCLC patients. Patients and methods: CTCs and circulating WBCs were enriched from peripheral blood samples (ISET® platform; Rarecells) from 106 NSCLC patients. PD-L1 expression on ISET filters and matched-tumor tissue was evaluated by automated immunostaining (SP142 antibody; Ventana), and quantified in tumor cells and WBCs. Results: CTCs were detected in 80 (75%) patients, with levels ranging from 2 to 256 CTCs/4ml, and median of 60 CTCs/4ml. Among 71 evaluable samples with matched-tissue and CTCs, 6 patients (8%) showed >1 PD-L1-positive CTCs and 11 patients (15%) showed >1% PD-L1-positive tumor cells in tumor tissue with 93% concordance between tissue and CTCs (sensitivity = 55%; specificity = 100%). From 74 samples with matched-tissue and circulating WBCs, 40 patients (54%) showed >1% PD-L1-positive immune infiltrates in tumortissue and 39 patients (53%) showed >1% PD-L1 positive in circulating WBCs, with 80% concordance between blood and tissue (sensitivity = 82%; specificity = 79%). We found a trend for worse survival in patients receiving first-line cisplatin-based chemotherapy treatments, whose tumors express PD-L1 in CTCs or immune cells (progression-free and overall survival), similar to the effects of PD-L1 expression in matched-patient tumors. Conclusions: These results demonstrated that PD-L1 status in CTCs and circulating WBCs correlate with PD-L1 status in tumor tissue, revealing the potential of CTCs assessment as a noninvasive real-time biopsy to evaluate PD-L1 expression in patients with advanced-stage NSCLC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]