| Literature DB >> 30760860 |
Dennis P O'Malley1, Yuhang Yang2, Saskia Boisot2, Sucha Sudarsanam2, Jian-Feng Wang2, Vladislav Chizhevsky2, Guohua Zhao2, Shehla Arain2, Lawrence M Weiss2.
Abstract
Targeting of the PD1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint pathway has rapidly gained acceptance as a therapeutic strategy for a growing number of malignancies. Testing for expression of PD-L1 in tumor cells and immune cells has been used as a companion or complementary test for drugs targeting the PD1/PD-L1 pathway. We evaluated the results of PD-L1 testing in a large reference lab cohort. Using Food and Drug Administration-approved methods and interpretive instructions for each individual test, 62,896 cases were evaluated for PD-L1 using antibody clone 22C3, 28-8, SP142, or SP263. Case data analyzed included test results and information on tumor location and clinical history. No clinical outcome information was available and no attempt was made to correlate PD-L1 results with any other tests performed. The following numbers of cases were evaluated: 22C3 with tumor proportion score [n = 52585], 22C3 with combined positive score [n = 2631], 28-8 [n = 4191], SP142 [n = 850], and SP263 [n = 70]. In 22C3/tumor proportion score cases, the general results were as follows: negative 33.1% (n = 17,405), (low) expression 33.9% (n = 17,822), and high expression 29.5% (n = 15,486). In cases identified as metastatic, the results were as follows: negative 35.9% (n = 1411), (low) expression 30.8% (n = 1211), and high expression 30.7% (n = 1208). We found broad ranges of expression in tumor types with increasing positivity, as adenocarcinomas were reported as poorly differentiated, whereas squamous cell carcinomas showed more positivity as tumors were described as well-differentiated. The results of many individual tumor types were evaluated and showed, in general, high levels of positive expression. Practical challenges and observations of PD-L1 stain results and interpretation are also discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30760860 PMCID: PMC6760643 DOI: 10.1038/s41379-019-0210-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mod Pathol ISSN: 0893-3952 Impact factor: 7.842
Summary of antibodies, targets, drugs, and medications associated with PD1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint therapy
| Antibody | Drug | Drug target | Indication | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 22C3 (Dako) | Pembrolizumab (Keytruda®); Merck | PD1 | NSCLC, melanoma, HNSCC, urothelial, gastric/GEJ, CHL, MSI-H/dMMR | |
| 28-8 (Dako) | Nivolumab (Opdivo™); Bristol-Myers-Squibb | PD1 | Advanced nsNSCLC, HNSCC, colorectal cancer (MSI-H/dMMR), melanoma, advanced liver cancer, CHL, advanced renal cancer, advanced urothelial cancer | Positive results = > 1%; nsNSCLC clinical results cutoffs at = > 1%; = > 5%; = > 10% |
| SP142 (Ventana) | Atezolizumab (Tecentriq™); Roche | PD-L1 | Urothelial, NSCLC | |
| SP263 (Ventana) | Durvalumab (Imfinzi®); AstraZeneca | PD-L1 | Urothelial, advanced NSCLC in patients whose disease has not progressed following platinum-based CRT | |
| 73-10 (Dako) | Avelumab (Bavencio®); EMD Seronon/Pfizer | PD-L1 | Merkel cell carcinoma, urothelial | Other tumor types in clinical trials |
CHL classic Hodgkin lymphoma; CRT chemo-radiation therapy; GEJ gastroesophageal junction; HNSCC head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; MSI-H/dMMR microsatellite instability–high/deleted mismatch repair; ns non-squamous; NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer
PD-L1 assay interpretation guidelines and scoring
| Antibody | Site/tumor type | Interpretation guidelines [positive]a |
|---|---|---|
| 22C3 | Gastroesophageal | Combined positive score (CPS); [Tumor + immune cells = > 1%] |
| Other sites | Tumor proportion score (TPS); [Tumor = > 1% expression; tumor = > 50% high expression] | |
| 28-8 | [Tumor cells > 1%] | |
| NSCLC | PD-L1 expression [tumor = > 1%; tumor = > 5%; tumor = > 10%b] | |
| HNSCC | PD-L1 expression [Tumor cells > 1%] | |
| Urothelial | PD-L1 expression [Tumor cells > 1%] | |
| Melanoma | PD-L1 expression [Tumor cells > 1%] | |
| SP142 | Urothelial | PD-L1 expression [ = > 5% in tumor-infiltrating immune cells] |
| NSCLC | PD-L1 expression [Tumor cell = > 50% or Immune cell = > 10%] | |
| SP263 | Urothelial | PD-L1 status [Tumor cells = > 25% OR Immune cells present > 1% and tumor associated immune cell staining = > 25% OR Immune cells present = 1% and tumor associated immune cell staining 100%: PD-L1 status – high] |
| NSCLC | PD-L1 IHC score [Tumor cells = > 1%] |
aAdditional indications and interpretation methods have been approved since the time of data collection. These interpretations were not included in the evaluation of this data
bDifferent expression cutoffs are associated with different levels of survival with nivolumab therapy
Anti-PD1/PD-L1 antibody staining information
| Antibody | Mfg. | Pretreatment | Mfg./Device | Reagent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 22C3 | Dako | EnVision FLEX | Dako Autostainer Link 48 | Dako Linker |
| 28-8 | Dako | EnVision FLEX | Dako Autostainer Link 48 | Dako Linker |
| SP142 | Ventana/Roche | CC1 Cell Conditioning | Ventana BenchMark ULTRA | OptiView detection kit |
| SP263 | Ventana/Roche | CC1 Cell Conditioning | Ventana BenchMark ULTRA | OptiView detection kit |
Fig. 1Combined results for positive expression, negative, and quantity not sufficient for SP142, 28-8, and 22C3 tumor proportion score (TPS), 22C3 combined positive score (CPS), and SP263
Combined results of anti-PD-L1 testing
| Antibody | Number of cases | Average age, years (range) | M:F | QNS number (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 22C3 | ||||
| TPS | 52585 | 68.8 ( < 1–105) | 51:49 | 1872 (3.6%) |
| CPS | 2623 | 65.5 (51–78) | 67:33 | 97 (3.7%) |
| 28-8 | 4191 | 68.0 (2–103) | 53:47 | 197 (4.7%) |
| SP142 | 850 | 69.0 (2–96) | 48:52 | 53 (6.2%) |
| SP263 | 70 | 64.0 (2–94) | 36:64 | 7 (10.0%) |
CPS combined positive score; QNS quantity not sufficient; TPS tumor proportion score
Analysis of 22C3 combined pathology score (CPS) groups
| Tumor type* | Search parameter | Number of cases | Average age, years | M:F | QNS % | Negative ( < 1%) | Expressed ( > 1%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All cases | 2623 | 65.5 | 1760:863 | 3.7 | 17.4 | 79.0 | |
| Esophageal | “esophageal” or “esophagus” or “GEJ” or “gastroesophageal” | 1059 | 67.2 | 862:197 | 2.5 | 11.7 | 85.8 |
| Gastric | “gastric” or “stomach” or “pyloric” or “antrum” or “cardia” | 696 | 64.8 | 421:275 | 3.0 | 13.4 | 83.6 |
| Adenocarcinoma | “adenocarcinoma” | 729 | 64.5 | 514:215 | 3.6 | 16.5 | 80.0 |
| Squamous cell carcinoma | “squamous” or “SCC” or “SCCA” | 67 | 68.9 | 39:28 | 4.5 | 11.9 | 83.6 |
| Metastatic | “metastatic” | 158 | 62.9 | 92:66 | 6.3 | 25.3 | 68.3 |
Analysis of 22C3 tumor proportion score (TPS) groups
| Tumor typea | Search parameter | Number of cases | Average age, years | M:F | QNS % | Negative ( < 1%) | Expressed (1-49%) | Highly expressed ( = > 50%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All cases | 52,585 | 68.9 | 51:49 | 3.6 | 33.1 | 33.9 | 29.5 | |
| Brain | “astrocytoma” or “glioblastoma” or “gbm” | 82 | 56.4 | 49:33 | 1.2 | 42.7 | 37.8 | 18.3 |
| Breast | “breast” or “lobular” or [“ductal” not “pancreatic”] | 737 | 61.3 | 0:737 | 3.7 | 58.2 | 27.5 | 10.6 |
| Colon | “colon” or “colonic” or “sigmoid” or “rectum” | 1142 | 64.3 | 321:521 | 1.9 | 66.6 | 26.2 | 5.3 |
| Endometrial | “endometrium” or “endometrial” or “uterus” | 258 | 63.5 | 0:258 | 3.1 | 54.7 | 38.0 | 4.3 |
| Esophageal | “esophageal” or “esophagus” or “GEJ” or “gastroesophageal” | 384 | 66.8 | 288:96 | 2.9 | 47.9 | 36.7 | 12.5 |
| Gastric | “gastric” or “stomach” or “pyloric” or “antrum” or “cardia” | 545 | 64.5 | 305:240 | 3.9 | 45.9 | 30.3 | 20.0 |
| Gastrointestinal stromal tumor | [“gastrointestinal” and “stroma”] or “GIST” | 42 | 65.0 | 24:18 | 2.4 | 50.0 | 45.2 | 2.4 |
| Hodgkin lymphoma | “Hodgkin” and “lymphoma” not [“NHL” or “non”] | 12 | 58.8 | 5:7 | 8.3 | 41.7 | 16.7 | 33.3 |
| Lung | [“lung” and “origin”] or [“lung” and “primary”] or [“non” and “small” and “cell”] or [“lepidic”] or [“pulmonary” and “origin”] or [“bronchogenic”] or [“NSCLC”] | 1695 | 69.7 | 819:876 | 3.9 | 25.9 | 33.7 | 36.5 |
| Melanoma | “melanoma” | 555 | 66.8 | 343:212 | 3.2 | 40.7 | 42.0 | 14.0 |
| Mesothelioma | “mesothelioma” | 77 | 71.6 | 55:22 | 3.9 | 37.7 | 42.9 | 15.6 |
| Mycosis fungoides | “mf” or “mycosis” or “fungoides” | 23 | 58.9 | 11:12 | 0 | 13.0 | 34.8 | 52.1 |
| Neuroendocrine | “neuroendocrine” or “merkel” or “carcinoid” | 268 | 67.2 | 150:118 | 2.6 | 62.3 | 28.4 | 6.7 |
| Ovary | “ovary” or “ovarian” | 256 | 62.3 | 0:256 | 2.0 | 61.3 | 33.2 | 3.5 |
| Pancreas | “pancreas” or “pancreatic” or “ampulla” | 286 | 65.0 | 153:133 | 2.8 | 54.6 | 31.8 | 10.8 |
| Prostate | “prostate” and “prostatic” | 193 | 72.4 | 193:0 | 3.1 | 63.2 | 23.8 | 9.8 |
| Renal | “kidney” or “renal” | 246 | 66.6 | 142:104 | 3.7 | 45.1 | 30.1 | 21.1 |
| Sarcoma | “sarcoma” | 140 | 63.8 | 69:71 | 2.1 | 40.7 | 23.6 | 33.6 |
| Thymoma | “thymoma” | 9 | 57.2 | 3:6 | 11.1 | 22.2 | 22.2 | 44.4 |
| Thyroid | “thyroid” | 68 | 61.3 | 18:50 | 4.4 | 49.0 | 20.6 | 26.5 |
| Urothelial | “bladder” or “urothelial” or “transitional” | 273 | 70.9 | 177:96 | 2.9 | 46.5 | 31.9 | 18.7 |
| Vulva or vagina | “vulva” or “vagina” | 85 | 64.4 | 0:85 | 2.3 | 44.7 | 31.8 | 21.2 |
| Adenocarcinoma | “adenocarcinoma” | 9575 | 69.1 | 4302:5273 | 3.2 | 33.7 | 34.5 | 28.6 |
| Poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma | [“poorly” and “differentiated”] and “adenocarcinoma” | 974 | 67.8 | 486:488 | 2.5 | 22.1 | 27.2 | 48.3 |
| Moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma | [“moderately” and “differentiated”] and “adenocarcinoma” | 676 | 69.1 | 304:372 | 2.5 | 36.8 | 38.6 | 22.0 |
| Well-differentiated adenocarcinoma | [“well” and “differentiated”] and “adenocarcinoma” | 278 | 71.5 | 114:164 | 4.7 | 49.6 | 38.1 | 7.6 |
| Mucinous adenocarcinoma | “mucinous” and “adenocarcinoma” | 226 | 69.7 | 111:115 | 3.5 | 51.3 | 34.1 | 11.1 |
| Squamous cell carcinoma | “squamous” or “SCC” or “SCCA” | 3102 | 70.5 | 1905:1197 | 2.3 | 26.4 | 40.8 | 30.5 |
| Poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma | [“poorly” and “differentiated”] and “squamous” or “SCC” or “SCCA” | 575 | 70.2 | 348:227 | 2.7 | 24.7 | 37.0 | 36.0 |
| Moderately differentiated squamous cell carcinoma | [“moderately” and “differentiated”] and “squamous” or “SCC” or “SCCA” | 508 | 71.6 | 312:196 | 0.6 | 24.2 | 44.3 | 30.9 |
| Well-differentiated squamous cell carcinoma | [“well” and “differentiated”] and “squamous” or “SCC” or “SCCA” | 71 | 68.6 | 42:29 | 1.4 | 16.9 | 54.9 | 26.8 |
| Adenosquamous | “adenosquamous” | 82 | 73.5 | 48:34 | 0 | 20.7 | 35.4 | 43.9 |
| Metastatic | “metastatic” | 3933 | 67.5 | 1944:1989 | 2.6 | 35.9 | 30.8 | 30.7 |
| Pleural fluid | [“pleural” and “fluid”] or [“pleural” and effusion”] | 2105 | 72.1 | 1025:1080 | 3.1 | 29.6 | 32.6 | 34.6 |
| Pericardial fluid | “pericardial” and “fluid” | 44 | 66.5 | 15:29 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 100 |
| Bone | “bone” | 2275 | 68.3 | 1246:1029 | 3.3 | 40.7 | 29.2 | 26.7 |
| Metastases in brain | “brain” and “metastatic” | 47 | 62.9 | 18:29 | 2.1 | 42.6 | 23.4 | 31.9 |
| Adrenal | “adrenal” | 549 | 67.7 | 307:242 | 3.6 | 27.5 | 33.9 | 35.0 |
aTumor type was assessed using a natural language search of submitted information for site and submitted clinical history. All cases may not be represented from larger data set due to ambiguous or missing information in submitted site/history
Fig. 2Scoring intensity of the majority of cells in the fields represented (22C3). a 0: negative. b 1 + : dim positive. c 2 + : moderate positive. d 3 + : strong positive. e 3 + : very strong positive; this latter pattern appears as uniform, intense membranous, and cytoplasmic staining. Although not specific, this may indicate constitutive overexpression of PD-L1 by tumor cells
Fig. 3a Adenocarcinoma in pericardial fluid (H&E). b All cases analyzed showed tumor expression of PD-L1 22C3
Analysis of 28-8
| Tumor type | Search parameter | Number of cases | Average age, years | M:F | QNS % | Negative (<1%) | Expressed ( > 1%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All cases | 4191 | 68 | 2229:1978 | 4.7 | 45.5 | 49.8 | |
| NSCLC | [“lung” and “origin”] or [“lung” and “primary”] or [“non” and “small” and “cell”] or [“lepidic”] or [“pulmonary” and “origin”] or [“bronchogenic”] or [“NSCLC”] | 530 | 70 | 49:51 | 4.9 | 41.1 | 54.0 |
| Melanoma | “melanoma” | 507 | 67 | 300:207 | 5.3 | 49.5 | 45.2 |
| Mesothelioma | “mesothelioma” | 65 | 66 | 41:24 | 1.5 | 50.8 | 47.7 |
| Urothelial | “bladder” or “urothelial” or “transitional” | 29 | 70 | 20:9 | 0 | 48.3 | 51.7 |
| Adenocarcinoma | “adenocarcinoma” | 603 | 69 | 273:330 | 5.5 | 46.9 | 47.6 |
| Squamous cell carcinoma | “squamous” or “SCC” or “SCCA” | 261 | 71 | 154:107 | 4.2 | 31.8 | 64.0 |
| Metastatic | “metastatic” | 355 | 66 | 171:184 | 4.2 | 52.4 | 43.4 |
NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer
Analysis of SP142
| Tumor type | Search parameter | Number of cases | Average age, years | M:F | QNS % | Negative ( < 1%) | Expressed ( > 1%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All cases | 850 | 69 | 441:409 | 6.2 | 68.4 | 25.4 | |
| Lung | “NSCLC”a | 733 | 68 | 363:370 | 6.9 | 23.5 | 69.6 |
| Breast | “breast” or “lobular” or [“ductal” not “pancreatic”] | 49 | 52 | 0:49 | 8.1 | 79.6 | 12.2 |
| Esophagus | “esophagus” or “esophageal” or “GEJ” | 15 | 64 | 13:2 | 0 | 86.7 | 13.3 |
| Adenocarcinoma | “adenocarcinoma” | 101 | 66 | 45:56 | 10.9 | 72.3 | 16.8 |
| SCC | “squamous” or “SCC” or “SCCA” | 45 | 72 | 23:22 | 15.6 | 57.8 | 26.7 |
| Metastatic | “metastatic” | 58 | 64 | 28:30 | 6.9 | 82.8 | 10.3 |
aIn contrast to other antibodies, NSCLC was indicated as a distinct parameter in database for SP142
Analysis of SP263
| Tumor type* | Search parameter | Number of cases | Average age, years | M:F | QNS % | Negative ( < 1%) | Expressed ( > 1%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All cases | 70 | 64 | 25:45 | 10.0 | 62.9 | 27.1 | |
| Urothelial | “bladder” or “urothelial” or “transitional” | 21 | 71 | 10:11 | 0 | 52.4 | 47.6 |
Comparison of PD-L1 expression in tumor types
| Antibody | Overall positive | Adenocarcinoma positive | Squamous cell carcinoma positive | Metastases positive |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 22C3-TPS | 63.2% | 63.1% | 71.3% | 61.5% |
| 22C3-CPS | 79.0 | 80.0% | 83.6% | 68.3% |
| 28-8 | 49.8% | 47.6% | 61.1% | 43.4% |
| SP142 | 24.1% | 16.8% | 26.7% | 10.3% |
Comparison of current study to results of Checkmate and Keynote studies
| Study | Description | Current study group/antibody–scoring |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Keynote 59 | Gastroesophageal carcinoma | Gastroesophageal carcinomas/22C3-CPS | 142 | < 0.00001 |
| Keynote 21 | Lung cancer | Lung cancer/22C3-TPS | 5 | 0.07 |
| Keynote 10 | Previously treated NSCLC | Lung cancer/22C3-TPS | 103 | < 0.0001 |
| Checkmate 275 | Urothelial cancer | Urothelial cancer/28-8-tumor cell expression | 0.6 | 0.81 |
| Checkmate 57 | Metastatic lung cancer | Lung cancer/22C3-TPS | 0.7 | 0.40 |
| Metastatic lung cancer | Metastases/22C3-TPS | 5.9 | 0.01 | |
| Checkmate 141 | Recurrent or metastatic squamous cell carcinoma | Squamous cell carcinoma/28-8 tumor cells | 4.3 | 0.04 |
| Checkmate 67 | Melanoma | Melanoma/28-8 tumor cells | 0.7 | 0.39 |
| Checkmate 238 | Adjuvant therapy for melanoma | Melanoma/28-8 tumor cells | 24 | < 0.00001 |
CPS combined positive score; TPS tumor proportion score
Fig. 4Examples (a, b) of intratumoral variation in PD-L1 staining intensity from 0 to 3 + (22C3)
Fig. 5Partial membranous PD-L1 staining (no staining at apical surface), which is still considered positive
Fig. 6Strong positive PD-L1 staining (3 + ) in luminal macrophages with no staining in tumor glandular cells (22C3)
Fig. 7a Low-magnification image of PD-L1 staining in tumor metastatic to lymph node. At the interface of tumor and non-tumor, there is intense staining in immune cells. b High magnification in tumor showing strong staining at the tumor interface, with immune cells positive and tumor cells at the interface positive. Tumor cells further from the interface are not positive (22C3)
Fig. 8Strong cytoplasmic staining of megakaryocytes for PD-L1 (22C3). Staining is noted in all antibodies
Fig. 9a Faint cytoplasmic staining for PD-L1 in breast carcinoma. This is not considered to be true positive staining (22C3). b Nuclear staining for PD-L1. This is not considered to represent positive staining in any scoring systems (22C3)
Fig. 10Anthracotic pigment (black) and strong PD-L1 staining in macrophages with no staining in tumor cells (22C3)
Kruskal–Wallis test followed by Dunn’s test for pairwise comparisons in adenocarcinoma/22C3/TPS
| Comparisons |
|
|---|---|
| Moderate–Mucinous | 0.07 |
| Moderate–Poor | 0.57 |
| Mucinous–Poor | 0.02* |
| Moderate–Well | 0.09 |
| Mucinous–Well | 0.91 |
| Poor–Well | 0.02* |
Kruskal–Wallis test followed by Dunn’s test for pairwise comparisons in squamous cell carcinoma/22C3/TPS
| Comparisons |
|
|---|---|
| Adenosquamous–Moderate | 0.05 |
| Adenosquamous–Poor | 0.04* |
| Moderate–Poor | 0.91 |
| Adenosquamous–Well | 0.91 |
| Moderate–Well | 0.04* |
| Poor–Well | 0.03* |