Soluble immune checkpoints: implications for cancer prognosis and response to immune checkpoint therapy and conventional therapies.
Stephanie C PittsJeffrey SchlomRenee N DonahuePublished in: Journal of experimental & clinical cancer research : CR (2024)
Longitudinal sampling of tumor tissue from patients with solid cancers, aside from melanoma and a few other cases, is often unfeasible, and thus may not capture the plasticity of interactions between the tumor and immune system under selective pressure of a given therapy. Peripheral blood analyses provide salient information about the human peripheral immunome while offering technical and practical advantages over traditional tumor biopsies, and should be utilized where possible alongside interrogation of the tumor. Some common blood-based biomarkers used to study the immune response include immune cell subsets, circulating tumor DNA, and protein analytes such as cytokines. With the recent explosion of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) as a modality of treatment in multiple cancer types, soluble immune checkpoints have become a relevant area of investigation for peripheral immune-based biomarkers. However, the exact functions of soluble immune checkpoints and their roles in cancer for the most part remain unclear. This review discusses current literature on the production, function, and expression of nine soluble immune checkpoints - sPD-L1, sPD-1, sCTLA4, sCD80, sTIM3, sLAG3, sB7-H3, sBTLA, and sHVEM - in patients with solid tumors, and explores their role as biomarkers of response to ICI as well as to conventional therapies (chemotherapy, radiotherapy, targeted therapy, and surgery) in cancer patients.
Keyphrases
- circulating tumor
- papillary thyroid
- peripheral blood
- immune response
- squamous cell
- systematic review
- minimally invasive
- locally advanced
- endothelial cells
- cell free
- early stage
- healthcare
- squamous cell carcinoma
- childhood cancer
- mesenchymal stem cells
- poor prognosis
- stem cells
- young adults
- single molecule
- small molecule
- cell therapy
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- protein protein
- amino acid