Assessment of systemic and gastrointestinal tissue damage biomarkers for GVHD risk stratification

  • Aaron Etra
  • Stephanie Gergoudis
  • George Morales
  • Nikolaos Spyrou
  • Jay Shah
  • Steven Kowalyk
  • Francis Ayuk
  • Janna Baez
  • Chantiya Chanswangphuwana
  • Yi-Bin Chen
  • Hannah Choe
  • Zachariah DeFilipp
  • Isha Gandhi
  • Elizabeth Hexner
  • William J Hogan
  • Ernst Holler
  • Urvi Kapoor
  • Carrie L Kitko
  • Sabrina Kraus
  • Jung-Yi Lin
  • Monzr Al Malki
  • Pietro Merli
  • Attaphol Pawarode
  • Michael A Pulsipher
  • Muna Qayed
  • Ran Reshef
  • Wolf Rösler
  • Tal Schechter
  • Grace Van Hyfte
  • Daniela Weber
  • Matthias Wölfl
  • Rachel Young
  • Umut Özbek
  • James L M Ferrara
  • John E Levine

Abstract

We used a rigorous PRoBE (prospective-specimen collection, retrospective-blinded-evaluation) study design to compare the ability of biomarkers of systemic inflammation and biomarkers of gastrointestinal (GI) tissue damage to predict response to corticosteroid treatment, the incidence of clinically severe disease, 6-month nonrelapse mortality (NRM), and overall survival in patients with acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). We prospectively collected serum samples of newly diagnosed GVHD patients (n = 730) from 19 centers, divided them into training (n = 352) and validation (n = 378) cohorts, and measured TNFR1, TIM3, IL6, ST2, and REG3α via enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Performances of the 4 strongest algorithms from the training cohort (TNFR1 + TIM3, TNFR1 + ST2, TNFR1 + REG3α, and ST2 + REG3α) were evaluated in the validation cohort. The algorithm that included only biomarkers of systemic inflammation (TNFR1 + TIM3) had a significantly smaller area under the curve (AUC; 0.57) than the AUCs of algorithms that contained ≥1 GI damage biomarker (TNFR1 + ST2, 0.70; TNFR1 + REG3α, 0.73; ST2 + REG3α, 0.79; all P < .001). All 4 algorithms were able to predict short-term outcomes such as response to systemic corticosteroids and severe GVHD, but the inclusion of a GI damage biomarker was needed to predict long-term outcomes such as 6-month NRM and survival. The algorithm that included 2 GI damage biomarkers was the most accurate of the 4 algorithms for all endpoints.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN2473-9529
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 28.06.2022

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

© 2022 by The American Society of Hematology. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), permitting only noncommercial, nonderivative use with attribution. All other rights reserved.

PubMed 35443021