Abstract

e17565 Background: We previously reported the significant prognostic and predictive utility of pretreatment serum PD-L1 in the CCTG MA.31 breast cancer serum bank (SABCS 2018, abstr PD3-10). IL-8 (CXCL8) is a pro-inflammatory cytokine that binds to CXCR1 and CXCR2 and promotes tumor immune escape and progression. High serum IL-8 levels are associated with poor prognosis in many cancers, and have recently been reported to predict for reduced overall survival (OS) to nivolumab in lung cancer and melanoma (ASCO 2018, abstr #3025). Here we correlated plasma IL-8 and PD-L1 levels with OS in mCRPC patients. Methods: 201 metastatic CRPC patients had EDTA plasma available for this retrospective analysis. Patient eligibility included chemotherapy-naive mCRPC patients. The ELLA immunoassay platform (ProteinSimple, San Jose, CA) was utilized to quantitate plasma IL-8 and PD-L1. Cox regression assessed hazard ratio (HR) for OS using both categorical (median) and continuous (log-transformed) biomarkers. Results: In univariate analysis, higher plasma IL-8 levels were significantly associated with reduced OS when analyzed as a continuous variable (HR = 1.53; p = 0.003) and were of borderline significance at the median cutpoint (HR = 1.32; p = 0.069; 20.9 vs 31.5 mos median OS). Plasma PD-L1 levels were not significantly associated with OS when analyzed as a continuous variable (p = 0.17), but increased levels were significant when analyzed at the median cutpoint (HR = 1.36; p = 0.044; 21.9 vs 29.0 mos median OS). When plasma IL-8 and PD-L1 levels were combined (median cutpoints), plasma IL-8 high / PD-L1 high patients (n = 58) had a significantly shorter OS vs the plasma IL-8 low / PD-L1 low patients (n = 58) (HR = 1.69; p = 0.009; 19.3 vs 32.9 mos median OS, respectively). In multivariate analysis, when adjusted for biopsy Gleason score, age, PSA, and ECOG PS (all at time of blood draw), only high plasma IL-8 (on a continuous basis) was significantly associated with reduced OS (HR = 1.43; p = 0.019). Conclusions: In mCRPC patients, high plasma IL-8 and PD-L1 levels were associated with reduced OS (separately and combined). Circulating IL-8 and PD-L1 evaluation may inform prognosis in mCRPC and could be considered as biomarkers in future studies determining response to immune checkpoint inhibitor and anti-IL8 therapy.

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