Abstract 402P
Background
Immune checkpoint inhibitors have demonstrated clinical benefits in breast cancer but still lack predictive efficacy indicators. We aim to investigate the significance of inflammatory markers as indicators of immunotherapy efficacy in patients with all subtypes of advanced breast cancer (ABC).
Methods
This retrospective study enrolled 116 patients with ABC who were treated with programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) inhibitors between January 2016 and June 2022 at Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center. Data on clinicopathological characteristics at baseline and several inflammatory markers before and after three courses of immunotherapy were collected. After obtaining optimal cut-off by R, the association of inflammatory markers with the objective response rate (ORR), progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS) were analysed.
Results
The lymphocyte-to-monocyte ratio (LMR), neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR), and C-reactive protein (CRP) at baseline and LMR, NLR, and CRP levels after three courses of immunotherapy (LMR3, NLR3, CRP3) were significantly associated with PFS and OS. Interestingly, subgroup analyses showed that OS was longer in the human epidermal growth receptor 2(HER2) low-expression group than in the HER2-negative group (27.83 vs 16.60 months, P=0.03). In all patients, multivariate Cox regression analysis showed that low level of CRP3 (CRP3 ≤ 2.95 vs. CRP3 > 2.95, HR = 0.510; 95% CI, 0.292-0.889; P = 0.018) and lower CRP3 compared to baseline (CRP3/CRP ≤ 4.44 vs CRP3/CRP > 4.44, HR = 0.467, 95% CI, 0.222-0.983, P = 0.045) were significantly associated with longer PFS. Meanwhile, the group with low level of NLR before (NLR ≤ 4.79 vs NLR > 4.79, HR = 0.383; 95% CI, 0.168-0.869; P = 0.022) and after (NLR3 ≤ 1.94 vs NLR3 > 1.94, HR = 0.370, 95% CI, 0.142-0.960, P = 0.041) immunotherapy, the patients with low level of CRP at baseline (CRP ≤ 15.52 vs CRP > 15.52, HR = 0.142; 95% CI, 0.050-0.404; P < 0.001), as well as the cohort with slower growth of CRP3 compared to baseline (CRP3/CRP ≤ 4.44 vs. CRP3/CRP > 4.44, HR = 0.347, 95% CI, 0.133-0.901, P = 0.030), had better OS.
Conclusions
In conclusion, peripheral blood NLR and CRP, which are easy to detect, may be potential biomarkers for predicting the efficacy of immunotherapy in ABC.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Beijing Xisike Clinical Oncology Research Foundation.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
414P - The complex relationship between circulating tumor cells (CTCs) and brain metastases (BMs) in metastatic breast cancer (mBC): A retrospective pooled analysis
Presenter: Brenno Pastò
Session: Poster session 15
415P - Comprehensive liquid biopsy characterization of patients with metastatic inflammatory breast cancer
Presenter: Eleonora Nicolo
Session: Poster session 15
417P - EV derived miR-21 as a promising biomarker for early diagnosis and tumor activity in discrete BC subtypes: The Exobreast project
Presenter: Claudia Omarini
Session: Poster session 15
418P - Concordance of PI3K-AKT pathway alterations between tumor and ctDNA in metastatic breast cancer
Presenter: Charlton Tsai
Session: Poster session 15
419P - Prevalence of gene rearrangement on ctDNA NGS and its targetability in patients with advanced breast cancer
Presenter: Ankur Bahl
Session: Poster session 15
420P - An exosome-based ESR1 monitoring RT-qPCR kit that rapidly and accurately detects acquired resistance variants at ≤ 0.1% frequency in liquid biopsy samples
Presenter: Sarah Statt
Session: Poster session 15
421P - Impact of novel agents in patients with stage IV denovo HR+ve/Her2-ve breast cancer: Results from a real-world dataset
Presenter: Shaheenah Dawood
Session: Poster session 15
422P - Disparities in treatment delays among metastatic breast cancer patients: Insights from nationwide electronic health records, 2011-2022
Presenter: Asal Pilehvari
Session: Poster session 15
423P - Marginalization and factors associated with early mortality among patients diagnosed with de novo metastatic breast cancer in Ontario, Canada
Presenter: Priya Thomas
Session: Poster session 15