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A multifactorial model of T cell expansion and durable clinical benefit in response to a PD-L1 inhibitor

Checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapies have had major success in treating patients with late-stage cancers, yet the minority of patients benefit. Mutation load and PD-L1 staining are leading biomarkers associated with response, but each is an imperfect predictor. A key challenge to predicting response...

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Autores principales: Leiserson, Mark D. M., Syrgkanis, Vasilis, Gilson, Amy, Dudik, Miroslav, Gillett, Sharon, Chayes, Jennifer, Borgs, Christian, Bajorin, Dean F., Rosenberg, Jonathan E., Funt, Samuel, Snyder, Alexandra, Mackey, Lester
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6312275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30596661
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208422
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author Leiserson, Mark D. M.
Syrgkanis, Vasilis
Gilson, Amy
Dudik, Miroslav
Gillett, Sharon
Chayes, Jennifer
Borgs, Christian
Bajorin, Dean F.
Rosenberg, Jonathan E.
Funt, Samuel
Snyder, Alexandra
Mackey, Lester
author_facet Leiserson, Mark D. M.
Syrgkanis, Vasilis
Gilson, Amy
Dudik, Miroslav
Gillett, Sharon
Chayes, Jennifer
Borgs, Christian
Bajorin, Dean F.
Rosenberg, Jonathan E.
Funt, Samuel
Snyder, Alexandra
Mackey, Lester
author_sort Leiserson, Mark D. M.
collection PubMed
description Checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapies have had major success in treating patients with late-stage cancers, yet the minority of patients benefit. Mutation load and PD-L1 staining are leading biomarkers associated with response, but each is an imperfect predictor. A key challenge to predicting response is modeling the interaction between the tumor and immune system. We begin to address this challenge with a multifactorial model for response to anti-PD-L1 therapy. We train a model to predict immune response in patients after treatment based on 36 clinical, tumor, and circulating features collected prior to treatment. We analyze data from 21 bladder cancer patients using the elastic net high-dimensional regression procedure and, as training set error is a biased and overly optimistic measure of prediction error, we use leave-one-out cross-validation to obtain unbiased estimates of accuracy on held-out patients. In held-out patients, the model explains 79% of the variance in T cell clonal expansion. This predicted immune response is multifactorial, as the variance explained is at most 23% if clinical, tumor, or circulating features are excluded. Moreover, if patients are triaged according to predicted expansion, only 38% of non-durable clinical benefit (DCB) patients need be treated to ensure that 100% of DCB patients are treated. In contrast, using mutation load or PD-L1 staining alone, one must treat at least 77% of non-DCB patients to ensure that all DCB patients receive treatment. Thus, integrative models of immune response may improve our ability to anticipate clinical benefit of immunotherapy.
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spelling pubmed-63122752019-01-08 A multifactorial model of T cell expansion and durable clinical benefit in response to a PD-L1 inhibitor Leiserson, Mark D. M. Syrgkanis, Vasilis Gilson, Amy Dudik, Miroslav Gillett, Sharon Chayes, Jennifer Borgs, Christian Bajorin, Dean F. Rosenberg, Jonathan E. Funt, Samuel Snyder, Alexandra Mackey, Lester PLoS One Research Article Checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapies have had major success in treating patients with late-stage cancers, yet the minority of patients benefit. Mutation load and PD-L1 staining are leading biomarkers associated with response, but each is an imperfect predictor. A key challenge to predicting response is modeling the interaction between the tumor and immune system. We begin to address this challenge with a multifactorial model for response to anti-PD-L1 therapy. We train a model to predict immune response in patients after treatment based on 36 clinical, tumor, and circulating features collected prior to treatment. We analyze data from 21 bladder cancer patients using the elastic net high-dimensional regression procedure and, as training set error is a biased and overly optimistic measure of prediction error, we use leave-one-out cross-validation to obtain unbiased estimates of accuracy on held-out patients. In held-out patients, the model explains 79% of the variance in T cell clonal expansion. This predicted immune response is multifactorial, as the variance explained is at most 23% if clinical, tumor, or circulating features are excluded. Moreover, if patients are triaged according to predicted expansion, only 38% of non-durable clinical benefit (DCB) patients need be treated to ensure that 100% of DCB patients are treated. In contrast, using mutation load or PD-L1 staining alone, one must treat at least 77% of non-DCB patients to ensure that all DCB patients receive treatment. Thus, integrative models of immune response may improve our ability to anticipate clinical benefit of immunotherapy. Public Library of Science 2018-12-31 /pmc/articles/PMC6312275/ /pubmed/30596661 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208422 Text en © 2018 Leiserson et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Leiserson, Mark D. M.
Syrgkanis, Vasilis
Gilson, Amy
Dudik, Miroslav
Gillett, Sharon
Chayes, Jennifer
Borgs, Christian
Bajorin, Dean F.
Rosenberg, Jonathan E.
Funt, Samuel
Snyder, Alexandra
Mackey, Lester
A multifactorial model of T cell expansion and durable clinical benefit in response to a PD-L1 inhibitor
title A multifactorial model of T cell expansion and durable clinical benefit in response to a PD-L1 inhibitor
title_full A multifactorial model of T cell expansion and durable clinical benefit in response to a PD-L1 inhibitor
title_fullStr A multifactorial model of T cell expansion and durable clinical benefit in response to a PD-L1 inhibitor
title_full_unstemmed A multifactorial model of T cell expansion and durable clinical benefit in response to a PD-L1 inhibitor
title_short A multifactorial model of T cell expansion and durable clinical benefit in response to a PD-L1 inhibitor
title_sort multifactorial model of t cell expansion and durable clinical benefit in response to a pd-l1 inhibitor
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6312275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30596661
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208422
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