Journal of Translational Medicine (Apr 2018)

Baseline antibody profiles predict toxicity in melanoma patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors

  • Michael F. Gowen,
  • Keith M. Giles,
  • Danny Simpson,
  • Jeremy Tchack,
  • Hua Zhou,
  • Una Moran,
  • Zarmeena Dawood,
  • Anna C. Pavlick,
  • Shaohui Hu,
  • Melissa A. Wilson,
  • Hua Zhong,
  • Michelle Krogsgaard,
  • Tomas Kirchhoff,
  • Iman Osman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-018-1452-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Background Immune checkpoint inhibitors (anti-CTLA-4, anti-PD-1, or the combination) enhance anti-tumor immune responses, yielding durable clinical benefit in several cancer types, including melanoma. However, a subset of patients experience immune-related adverse events (irAEs), which can be severe and result in treatment termination. To date, no biomarker exists that can predict development of irAEs. Methods We hypothesized that pre-treatment antibody profiles identify a subset of patients who possess a sub-clinical autoimmune phenotype that predisposes them to develop severe irAEs following immune system disinhibition. Using a HuProt human proteome array, we profiled baseline antibody levels in sera from melanoma patients treated with anti-CTLA-4, anti-PD-1, or the combination, and used support vector machine models to identify pre-treatment antibody signatures that predict irAE development. Results We identified distinct pre-treatment serum antibody profiles associated with severe irAEs for each therapy group. Support vector machine classifier models identified antibody signatures that could effectively discriminate between toxicity groups with > 90% accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity. Pathway analyses revealed significant enrichment of antibody targets associated with immunity/autoimmunity, including TNFα signaling, toll-like receptor signaling and microRNA biogenesis. Conclusions Our results provide the first evidence supporting a predisposition to develop severe irAEs upon immune system disinhibition, which requires further independent validation in a clinical trial setting.

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