Scientific Reports (Oct 2023)

Serum KL-6 levels predict the occurrence and severity of treatment-related interstitial lung disease in lung cancer

  • Hwa Kyung Park,
  • Chang-Seok Yoon,
  • Young-Ok Na,
  • Jae-Kyeong Lee,
  • Hyung-Joo Oh,
  • Ha-Young Park,
  • Bo-Gun Kho,
  • Tae-Ok Kim,
  • Hong-Joon Shin,
  • Yong-Soo Kwon,
  • In-Jae Oh,
  • Yu-Il Kim,
  • Sung-Chul Lim,
  • Young-Chul Kim,
  • Cheol-Kyu Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-45170-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

Read online

Abstract In this study, we aimed to investigate the feasibility of serum Krebs von den Lungen-6 (KL-6) as a potential biomarker for treatment-related ILD (TR-ILD) in lung cancer. We recruited patients with lung cancer in whom KL-6 was measured to differentiate between pneumonia and ILD (category 1), diagnose and assess the severity of suspicious ILD (category 2), or evaluate baseline levels before cancer treatment (category 3). Among 1,297 patients who underwent KL-6 testing, 422 had lung cancer, and TR-ILD was detected in 195 patients. In categories 1–2, median KL-6 level was higher in drug-induced ILD or acute exacerbation of underlying ILD than in no ILD or radiation-induced pneumonitis, and it was correlated with the severity of TR-ILD. High KL-6 level (cut-off: > 436U/mL) was an independent risk factor for severe TR-ILD, and low KL-6 level with high procalcitonin level (> 0.5 ng/mL) could exclude severe TR-ILD. Patients with severe TR-ILD had worse overall survival than those without, whereas high baseline KL-6 level was associated with worse survival, especially in patients without severe TR-ILD. Therefore, serum KL-6 may be a surrogate marker for predicting the occurrence and assessing the severity of TR-ILD at the time of suspected ILD and before lung cancer treatment.