High Serum PD-L1 Levels Are Associated with Poor Survival in Urothelial Cancer Patients
Treated with Chemotherapy and Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Therapy
ÚNKP-20-5-SE-1(ÚNKP-20-5-SE-1) Támogató: Innovációs és Technológiai Minisztérium
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Serum PD-L1 (sPD-L1) levels are associated with prognosis in various tumors but has
not yet been investigated in advanced bladder cancer. We assessed pretreatment serum
samples from 83 BC patients who received platinum chemotherapy and from 12 patients
who underwent immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy. In addition, on-treatment
samples from further therapy cycles were collected during chemotherapy (n = 58) and
ICI therapy (n = 11). Serum PD-L1 levels were determined using ELISA. High baseline
sPD-L1 levels were associated with worse ECOG status (p = 0.007) and shorter overall
survival for both chemotherapy- and ICI-treated patients (p = 0.002 and p = 0.040,
respectively). Multivariate analysis revealed high baseline sPD-L1 level as an independent
predictor of poor survival for platinum-treated patients (p = 0.002). A correlation
analysis between serum concentrations of PD-L1 and matrix metalloprotease-7 (MMP-7)-a
protease which was recently found to cleave PD-L1-revealed a positive correlation
(p = 0.001). No significant sPD-L1 changes were detected during chemotherapy, while
in contrast we found a strong, 25-fold increase in sPD-L1 levels during atezolizumab
treatment. In conclusion, our work demonstrates that pretreatment sPD-L1 levels are
associated with a poor prognosis of BC patients undergoing platinum and ICI therapy.
Future research should prospectively address the value of sPD-L1 in predicting treatment
response.