High levels of PD-L1 on platelets of NSCLC patients contributes to the pharmacological activity of Atezolizumab - 11/11/23

Abstract |
Several studies have associated platelets (PLTs) to NSCLC prognosis. To understand the role of PLTs in immunotherapy-treated patients, we used blood samples of NSCLC patients at different TNM stage. We found that PLTs count and the expression of PD-L1 (pPD-L1) were significantly higher in NSCLC patients at Stage IV than Stage I-III and healthy subjects. The presence of high pPD-L1 was associated to upregulated genes for the extracellular matrix organization and tumor immunosuppression. When patients’ survival was correlated to the levels of pPD-L1, longer survival rate was observed, but not when progression disease occurred. The in vitro stimulation of pPD-L1 with Atezolizumab induced CXCL4 release, accompanied by higher levels of TGFβ at the time of drug resistance when the levels of CD16, CD32 and CD64 significantly increased. Leiden-clustering method defined the phenotype of PLTs which showed that the ezrin-radixin-moesin (ERM) family proteins, underlying the PD-L1 signalosome, were involved in high pPD-L1 and higher survival rate. These data imply that Stage IV NSCLC patients characterized by high pPD-L1 are associated with longer progression-free survival rate because the blockade of pPD-L1 by Atezolizumab avoids the exacerbation of a T cell-mediated immune-suppressive environment. pPD-L1 could be an easy-to-use clinical approach to predict ICI responsiveness.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Graphical Abstract |
Highlights |
• | NSCLC patients can be differentiated according to the level of PD-L1 on PLTs. |
• | Stage IV patients with higher levels of pPD-L1 had longer progression-free survival probability than patients with low pPD-L1 because of the PD-L1 signalosome. |
• | The in vitro interaction of pPD-L1 with atezolizumab inhibits PLTs to induce an immunosuppressive environment, but PLTs of patients treated with ICIs have lower levels of pPD-L1. |
• | pPD-L1 can represent an easy-to-use clinical approach to predict ICI responsiveness. |
Keywords : Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), Platelets (PLTs), Immunotherapy, Survival rate, Tumor progression
Plan
Vol 168
Article 115709- décembre 2023 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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