Cancers (Jun 2019)

Determination of PD-L1 Expression in Circulating Tumor Cells of NSCLC Patients and Correlation with Response to PD-1/PD-L1 Inhibitors

  • Melanie Janning,
  • Franca Kobus,
  • Anna Babayan,
  • Harriet Wikman,
  • Janna-Lisa Velthaus,
  • Sonja Bergmann,
  • Stefanie Schatz,
  • Markus Falk,
  • Lars-Arne Berger,
  • Lisa-Marie Böttcher,
  • Sarina Päsler,
  • Tobias M. Gorges,
  • Linda O’Flaherty,
  • Claudia Hille,
  • Simon A. Joosse,
  • Ronald Simon,
  • Markus Tiemann,
  • Carsten Bokemeyer,
  • Martin Reck,
  • Sabine Riethdorf,
  • Klaus Pantel,
  • Sonja Loges

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers11060835
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 6
p. 835

Abstract

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Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) hold great potential to answer key questions of how non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) evolves and develops resistance upon anti-PD-1/PD-L1 treatment. Currently, their clinical utility in NSCLC is compromised by a low detection rate with the established, Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved, EpCAM-based CellSearch® System. We tested an epitope-independent method (ParsortixTM system) and utilized it to assess PD-L1 expression of CTCs from NSCLC patients. We prospectively collected 127 samples, 97 of which were analyzed with the epitope-independent system in comparison to the CellSearch system. CTCs were determined by immunocytochemistry as intact, nucleated, CD45−, pankeratins (K)+ cells. PD-L1 status of CTCs was evaluated from 89 samples. With the epitope-independent system, ≥1 CTC per blood sample was detected in 59 samples (61%) compared to 31 samples (32%) with the EpCAM-based system. Upon PD-L1 staining, 47% of patients harbored only PD-L1+CTCs, 47% had PD-L1+ and PD-L1−CTCs, and only 7% displayed exclusively PD-L1−CTCs. The percentage of PD-L1+CTCs did not correlate with the percentage of PD-L1+ in biopsies determined by immunohistochemistry (p = 0.179). Upon disease progression, all patients showed an increase in PD-L1+CTCs, while no change or a decrease in PD-L1+CTCs was observed in responding patients (n = 11; p = 0.001). Our data show a considerable heterogeneity in the PD-L1 status of CTCs from NSCLC patients. An increase of PD-L1+CTCs holds potential to predict resistance to PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors.

Keywords