4.7 Article

Mass Spectrometry-Based Serum and Plasma Peptidome Profiling for Prediction of Treatment Outcome in Patients With Solid Malignancies

Journal

ONCOLOGIST
Volume 19, Issue 10, Pages 1028-1039

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1634/theoncologist.2014-0101

Keywords

SELDI; MALDI; Cancer; Peptidomics; Personalized medicine; Blood

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Introduction. Treatment selection tools are needed to enhance the efficacy of targeted treatment in patients with solid malignancies. Providing a readout of aberrant signaling pathways and proteolytic events, mass spectrometry-based (MS-based) peptidomics enables identification of predictive biomarkers, whereas the serum or plasma peptidome may provide easily accessible signatures associated with response to treatment. In this systematic review, we evaluate MS-based peptide profiling in blood for prompt clinical implementation. Methods. PubMed and Embase were searched for studies using a syntax based on the following hierarchy: (a) blood-based matrix-assisted or surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight MS peptide profiling (b) in patients with solid malignancies (c) prior to initiation of any treatment modality, (d) with availability of outcome data. Results. Thirty-eight studies were eligible for review; the majority were performed in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Median classification prediction accuracy was 80% (range: 66%-93%) in 11 models from 14 studies reporting an MS-based classification model. A pooled analysis of 9 NSCLC studies revealed clinically significant median progression-free survival in patients classified as poor outcome and good outcome of 2.0 +/- 1.06 months and 4.6 +/- 1.60 months, respectively; median overall survival was also clinically significant at 4.01 +/- 1.60 months and 10.52 +/- 3.49 months, respectively. Conclusion. Pretreatment MS-based serum and plasma peptidomics have shown promising results for prediction of treatment outcome in patients with solid tumors. Limited sample sizes and absence of signature validation in many studies have prohibited clinical implementation thus far. Our pooled analysis and recent results from the PROSE study indicate that this profiling approach enables treatment selection, but additional prospective studies are warranted.

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