Case and specimen information:
| Report ID | ATLA-220423-1 | ||
| Study name | Choice of PD-L1 immunohistochemistry assay influences clinical eligibility for gastric cancer immunotherapy | ||
| Study authors | Joe Yeong, Huey Yew Jeffrey Lum, Chong Boon Teo, Benjamin Kye Jyn Tan, Yiong Huak Chan, Ryan Yong Kiat Tay, Joan Rou-En Choo, Anand D. Jeyasekharan, Qing Hao Miow, Lit-Hsin Loo, Wei Peng Yong and Raghav Sundar | ||
| Summary | Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) are now standard-of-care treatment for patients with metastatic gastric cancer (GC). To guide patient selection for ICI therapy, programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) biomarker expression is routinely assessed via immunohistochemistry (IHC). However, with an increasing number of approved ICIs, each paired with a different PD-L1 antibody IHC assay used in their respective landmark trials, there is an unmet clinical and logistical need for harmonization. We investigated the interchangeability between the Dako 22C3, Dako 28-8 and Ventana SP-142 assays in GC PD-L1 IHC. In this cross-sectional study, we scored 362 GC samples for PD-L1 combined positive score (CPS), tumor proportion score (TPS) and immune cells (IC) using a multiplex IHC/immunofluorescence technique. Samples were obtained via biopsy or resection of gastric cancer. The percentage of PD-L1 positive samples at clinically relevant CPS ≥1, ≥5 and ≥10 cut-offs for the 28-8 assay were approximately two-fold higher than that of the 22C3 (CPS≥1: 70.3% vs 49.4%, p<0.001; CPS≥5: 29.1% vs 13.4%, p<0.001; CPS≥10: 13.7% vs 7.0%, p=0.004). The mean CPS score on 28-8 assay was nearly double that of the 22C3 (6.39 ±14.5 vs 3.46±8.98, p<0.001). At the clinically important CPS≥5 cut-off, there was only moderate concordance between the 22C3 and 28-8 assays. Our findings suggest that scoring PD-L1 CPS with the 28-8 assay may result in higher PD-L1 scores and higher proportion of PD-L1 positivity compared to 22C3 and other assays. Until stronger evidence of inter-assay concordance is found, we urge caution in treating the assays as equivalent. Exemplary images of GC samples from four 28-8 positive, 22c3 negative patients from our study: |
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| Reference | https://doi.org/10.1007/s10120-022-01301-0 | ||
| Specimen type | Human gastric tissue | ||
| Specimen ID | ATLA22002 | ||
| Image format | Tagged Image File Format | Image number | 1 |
| Submitted by: | |
|---|---|
| Submitter |
Joey Jia Ying Lee
(ImmunoAtlas, Bioinformatics Institute, A*STAR) |
| Last updated | 20 Jul, 2022 (Wed), 5:34 PM |