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Published in: Journal of Translational Medicine 1/2018

Open Access 01-12-2018 | Research

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

Authors: 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

Published in: Journal of Translational Medicine | Issue 1/2018

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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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Metadata
Title
Baseline antibody profiles predict toxicity in melanoma patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors
Authors
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
Publication date
01-12-2018
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Journal of Translational Medicine / Issue 1/2018
Electronic ISSN: 1479-5876
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-018-1452-4

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