Abstract

In the immunotherapy era it is difficult to predict patient prognosis on the basis of radiological staging alone, especially for the subgroup with stable disease (SD), which encompasses a wide range of clinical outcomes. Thus, there is need for reliable and, ideally, cost-efficient biomarkers to improve the accuracy of outcome prediction. We evaluated the on-treatment modified Glasgow Prognostic Score (mGPS)-a known predictor of outcomes in several cancers that is based on serum C-reactive protein and albumin-in patients with metastatic urothelial carcinoma (mUC) treated with immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) in the phase 2 IMvigor210 and phase 3 IMvigor211 trials. On-treatment mGPS provides valuable prognostic information complementary to radiological staging, particularly for patients with SD. In IMvigor210, on-treatment mGPS predicts outcomes as early as 6 wk after ICI initiation, considerably before the first routine staging typically performed after 10-12 wk. Our study suggests that on-treatment mGPS complements radiological imaging in predicting outcomes for patients with mUC undergoing ICI. PATIENT SUMMARY: For patients with metastatic bladder cancer receiving immunotherapy, it is difficult to predict treatment outcomes from imaging scans alone. Our study results suggest that a score called the modified Glasgow Prognostic Score based on just two proteins (C-reactive protein and albumin) measured in blood can accurately predict outcomes. Use of the mGPS along with imaging scans may be better in predicting the survival benefit from immunotherapy.

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