Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is emerging as an abundant source of candidate biomarkers, including proteins, for gliomas. Longitudinal CSF access may enable insights into treatment response and resistance. To that end, we have established a growing biobank of CSF samples, many of which have been obtained longitudinally via CSF access devices, such as Ommaya reservoirs, through our ongoing biomarker discovery clinical trials (NCT04692337, 04692324). We have previously presented our initial data demonstrating a conserved proteomic signature of HGG that decreased with resection and increased with recurrence. Since then, samples have been acquired throughout individual patients’ treatments toward our goal of identifying CSF-derived biomarkers of treatment response. MATERIAL AND METHODS CSF samples obtained prior to, during, and throughout treatment underwent global proteomics analysis via the SomaScan® assay by Somalogic, which uses slow off-rate modified aptamers to sensitively detect over 7,000 proteins. Fold-changes for each protein were calculated between different timepoints for each patient and ranked based on the comparison of interest. Comparisons included prior to versus after resection, chemoradiation or adjuvant temozolomide (each with or without pembrolizumab), bevacizumab, and low versus high blood contamination. RESULTS Treatment with pembrolizumab alone resulted in increased IL-23 (5.01x), IL-12 (4.25x), lymphocyte activation gene 3 protein (LAG3) (3.26x), and granzyme A (2.93x). Chemoradiation, with or without pembrolizumab, consistently downregulated NAD kinase, acetyl CoA transferase, and Bcl-2 and upregulated proteins related to neuronal signaling, such as neurexins and cerebellins, in addition to LAG-3, suggesting potential for synergy between chemoradiation and anti-LAG-3 antibodies currently in clinical trials. Interestingly, pembrolizumab and chemoradiation decreased MMP-12 and MMP-9 abundance as compared to chemoradiation alone (0.25x vs. 18.5x; 0.54x vs. 4.99x). Finally, bevacizumab treatment consistently increased VEGF (7.32x), GFAP (3.38x), and MMP-3 (2.99x) abundance, while decreasing the presence of our previously reported plasma-associated protein signature in CSF, suggesting decreased blood-brain barrier disruption. CONCLUSION The global CSF proteome can be longitudinally accessed to evaluate response to standard-of-care and experimental therapies. Further studies are ongoing to identify signatures of therapeutic resistance and to assess the impact of novel immunotherapeutic combinations on the CSF proteome.

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