Abstract 40P
Background
Immune checkpoint inhibitors have become standard of care for many cancer subtypes. Next generation immuno-oncology (IO) agents are in clinical testing, with thousands of combinations in preclinical evaluation. The success of current and future immunotherapies relies on tools, data and technology to rationalize their use and manage toxicity. However, few biomarkers can distinguish responders from non-responders, predict toxicity, or guide treatment choices.
Methods
MANIFEST (https://www.manifest-io.org.uk/), a UKRI/MRC funded platform, leverages scalable methodologies to provide deep profiling of patients receiving immunotherapy; delivering multimodal data integration and modelling. The platform comprises NHS trusts (hospitals), research institutes and universities, and industry partners. The aims of MANIFEST is to harmonise sampling, assays and analyses of IO biomarkers and couple them with large-scale studies in patients with cancer. The platform’s utility will be demonstrated with exemplar projects encompassing multiple tumour types (melanoma, renal cell carcinoma, bladder cancer and triple-negative breast cancer), where predicting treatment outcomes and toxicities remains an unmet need.
Results
We have access to longitudinal samples of >3,000 patients across 10 reported studies. Through partner NHS sites, we aim to prospectively collect and profile samples (blood, stool and tumour) from ∼3,000 patients over 3 years. A tiered approach will implement workflows for high-volume biomarker discovery (Tier 1). In-depth profiling (Tiers 2&3) will further characterize tumours using peripheral immune profiling including high-dimensional flow cytometry, liquid biopsy (cfDNA, immune methylation profiling), spatial tissue image-profiling and molecular profiling (WES, bulk&long-read RNAseq, TCR&BCRseq). For selected patients, we will apply Representative Sequencing (RepSeq), to overcome sampling bias in solid tumours and conduct drug-sensitivity screening through patient-derived tumour fragments.
Conclusions
Machine learning will be applied to derive uni- and multi- modal biomarkers of response and toxicity, and the master databases will be available for ongoing academic and industry research.
Legal entity responsible for the study
The Francis Crick Institute & The MANIFEST Consortium.
Funding
UKRI, Medical Research Council and Office of Life Sciences.
Disclosure
T. Lawley: Financial Interests, Institutional, Leadership Role: Microbiotica. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
21P - Impact of TP53 mutation subtypes on the efficacy of anti-PD-(L)1 immunotherapy in patients with non-small cell lung cancer
Presenter: Lige Wu
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
22P - Extracellular vesicles as predictive biomarkers for chemoimmunotherapy in biliary tract cancer
Presenter: Michele Zanoni
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
23P - Non-small cell lung cancer DNA methylation profiles correlate with immune checkpoint inhibitor response
Presenter: Julia Berger
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
24P - Blood DNA methylation profiles in NSCLC patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors
Presenter: Markus Kleinberger
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
25P - Circulating tumor DNA is predictive of overall survival in patients with metastatic uveal melanoma
Presenter: Egle Ramelyte
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
26P - Liquid biopsy-based percision immunotherapy: CCAT1 and HEIH lncRNAs identify young breast cancer patients likely to respond to PD-L1 blockade
Presenter: Rana Youness
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
27P - Single cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) analysis of peripheral immune cell populations from patients treated with anti-PD1 with recurrent and/or metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (R/M SCCHN)
Presenter: Séverine Carlier
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
28P - Circulating biomarkers in non-small cell lung cancer patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors
Presenter: Paola Ulivi
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
29P - Prognostic value of systemic inflammatory index and platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio in muscle-invasive bladder cancer patients treated with neoadjuvant chemo-immunotherapy in the AURA trial
Presenter: Jeremy Blanc
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
30P - The prognostic value of low density neutrophils in breast cancer: Implications for therapeutic strategies
Presenter: Telma Martins
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract