- Flanagan, Kevin;
- Earls, Jon;
- Hiken, Jeffrey;
- Wellinghoff, Rachel;
- Ponder, Michelle;
- McLeod, Howard;
- Westra, William;
- Vavinskaya, Vera;
- Sutton, Leisa;
- Deichaite, Ida;
- Macdonald, Orlan;
- Welaya, Karim;
- Wade, James;
- Azzi, Georges;
- Pippas, Andrew;
- Slim, Jennifer;
- Bank, Bruce;
- Sui, Xingwei;
- Kossman, Steven;
- Shenkenberg, Todd;
- Alexander, Warren;
- Price, Katharine;
- Ley, Jessica;
- Messina, David;
- Glasscock, Jarret;
- Colevas, A;
- Cohen, Ezra;
- Adkins, Douglas;
- Duncavage, Eric
BACKGROUND: Despite advances in cancer care and detection, >65% of patients with squamous cell cancer of the head and neck (HNSCC) will develop recurrent and/or metastatic disease. The prognosis for these patients is poor with a 5-year overall survival of 39%. Recent treatment advances in immunotherapy, including immune checkpoint inhibitors like pembrolizumab and nivolumab, have resulted in clinical benefit in a subset of patients. There is a critical clinical need to identify patients who benefit from these antiprogrammed cell death protein 1 (anti-PD-1) immune checkpoint inhibitors. METHODS: Here, we report findings from a multicenter observational study, PREDicting immunotherapy efficacy from Analysis of Pre-treatment Tumor biopsies (PREDAPT), conducted across 17 US healthcare systems. PREDAPT aimed to validate OncoPrism-HNSCC, a clinical biomarker assay predictive of disease control in patients with recurrent or metastatic HNSCC treated with anti-PD-1 immune checkpoint inhibitors as a single agent (monotherapy) and in combination with chemotherapy (chemo-immunotherapy). The test used RNA-sequencing data and machine learning models to score each patient and place them into groups of low, medium, or high. RESULTS: The OncoPrism-HNSCC prediction significantly correlated with disease control in both the monotherapy cohort (n=62, p=0.004) and the chemo-immunotherapy cohort (n=50, p=0.01). OncoPrism-HNSCC also significantly predicted progression-free survival in both cohorts (p=0.015 and p=0.037, respectively). OncoPrism-HNSCC had more than threefold higher specificity than programmed death-ligand 1 combined positive score and nearly fourfold higher sensitivity than tumor mutational burden for predicting disease control. CONCLUSIONS: Here, we demonstrate the clinical validity of the OncoPrism-HNSCC assay in identifying patients with disease control in response to anti-PD-1 immune checkpoint inhibitors. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT04510129.