BMJ Oncology (Aug 2024)

Baseline tumour vessel perfusion as a non-invasive predictive biomarker for immune checkpoint therapy in non-small-cell lung cancer

  • Wei Xu,
  • Li Zhang,
  • Ying Wang,
  • Ke Ma,
  • Yunpeng Yang,
  • Yuhui Huang,
  • Peng Fan,
  • Liang Sun,
  • Bo Zhu,
  • Rakesh K. Jain,
  • Zhenhua Liu,
  • Qingzhu Jia,
  • Junhui Wang,
  • Jiya Sun,
  • Liansai Sun,
  • Hongtai Shi,
  • Songbing Qin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjonc-2024-000473
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1

Abstract

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Objective Current biomarkers for predicting immunotherapy response in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are derived from invasive procedures with limited predictive accuracy. Thus, identifying a non-invasive predictive biomarker would improve patient stratification and precision immunotherapy.Methods and analysis In this retrospective multicohort study, the discovery cohort included 205 NSCLC patients screened from ORIENT-11 and an external validation (EV) cohort included 99 real-world NSCLC patients. The ‘onion-mode segmentation’ method was developed to extract ‘onion-mode perfusion’ (OMP) from contrast-enhanced CT images. The predictive performance of OMP or its combination with the PD-L1 Tumour Proportion Score (TPS) was evaluated by the area under the curve (AUC).Results High baseline OMP was associated with significantly longer survival and predicted patient response to combination anti-PD-(L)1 therapy in the discovery and EV cohorts. OMP complemented the PD-L1 TPS with superior predictive sensitivity (p=0.02). In the PD-L1 TPS<50% subgroup, OMP achieved an AUC of 0.77 for the estimation of treatment response (95% CI 0.66 to 0.86, p<0.0001). A simple bivariate model of OMP/PD-L1 robustly predicted therapeutic response in both the discovery (AUC 0.82, 95% CI 0.74 to 0.88, p<0.0001) and EV (AUC 0.80, 95% CI 0.67 to 0.89, p<0.0001) cohorts.Conclusion OMP, derived from routine CT examination, could serve as a non-invasive and cost-effective biomarker to predict NSCLC patient response to immune checkpoint inhibitor-based therapy. OMP could be used alone or in combination with other biomarkers to improve precision immunotherapy.