Programmed death ligand-1 PET imaging in patients with melanoma: a pilot study.

Publication date: Jun 25, 2025

Programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) is an inducible protein heterogeneously expressed in melanoma. Assessment of PD-L1 expression is challenging and standard immunohistochemistry (IHC) requires biopsies and cannot capture heterogeneity of expression. Noninvasive imaging methods provide evaluation of expression across lesions in the body. We conducted a prospective pilot trial with PD-L1 PET imaging with [18F]-BMS-986229 as a noninvasive approach to assess PD-L1 expression across lesions, in 10 patients with advanced melanoma, longitudinally during treatment with nivolumab and ipilimumab. PET imaging was performed at baseline and at 6 weeks after-initiation of treatment. We examined the relationship of PD-L1 PET uptake to radiographic clinical response. [18F]-BMS-986229 uptake was variably seen across lesions in patients at baseline. All patients showed positive uptake in lesions at baseline PET with a median SUVmax of 3. 6 (range: 1. 7-8. 6). PD-L1 PET SUVmax decreased in all but two lesions 6 weeks after treatment initiation. Four of five patients had a mean (SUVmax) greater than or equal to 3. 00 in Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) evaluable lesions at baseline, and all had a RECIST response while all progressors (n = 3) had baseline PD-L1 mean SUVmax less than or equal to 2. 60. A higher lesional baseline SUVmax was associated with greater individual lesion reduction during treatment. The PD-L1 uptake in lesions showed a low correlation with baseline PD-L1 by IHC. In this small pilot study, PD-L1 PET imaging using [18F]-BMS-986229 showed feasibility in noninvasively assessing lesion uptake and PD-L1 heterogeneity in patients receiving combination immunotherapy. Future exploration of this tracer in larger patient cohorts is necessary to delineate its use in managing immunotherapy treatments.

Concepts Keywords
Biopsies immunoPET
Death immunotherapy
Ligand melanoma
Pilot PD-L1

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH death
disease MESH melanoma
pathway KEGG Melanoma
drug DRUGBANK Nivolumab
drug DRUGBANK Ipilimumab
drug DRUGBANK Aspartame
disease MESH Tumors

Original Article

(Visited 3 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *