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Fit-For-Purpose PD-L1 Biomarker Testing For Patient Selection in Immuno-Oncology: Guidelines For Clinical Laboratories From the Canadian Association of Pathologists-Association Canadienne Des Pathologistes (CAP-ACP)
Author(s) -
Carol C. Cheung,
Penny J. Barnes,
Gilbert Bigras,
Scott Boerner,
Jagdish Butany,
Fiorella Calabrese,
Christian Couture,
Jean Deschênes,
Hala ElZimaity,
Gábor Fischer,
Pierre Fiset,
J. R. Garratt,
Laurette Geldenhuys,
C. Blake Gilks,
Marius Ilié,
Dia. Ionescu,
Hyun J. Lim,
Lisa Manning,
Adnan Mansoor,
Robert H. Riddell,
Catherine Ross,
Sinchita RoyChowdhuri,
Alan Spatz,
Paul E. Swanson,
Victor A. Tron,
MingSound Tsao,
Hangjun Wang,
Zhaolin Xu,
Emina Torlakovic
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
applied immunohistochemistry and molecular morphology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.868
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1541-2016
pISSN - 1533-4058
DOI - 10.1097/pai.0000000000000800
Subject(s) - medicine , oncology , cancer , lung cancer , biomarker , clinical trial , disease , guideline , pathology , biochemistry , chemistry
Since 2014, programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1)/programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1) checkpoint inhibitors have been approved by various regulatory agencies for the treatment of multiple cancers including melanoma, lung cancer, urothelial carcinoma, renal cell carcinoma, head and neck cancer, classical Hodgkin lymphoma, colorectal cancer, gastroesophageal cancer, hepatocellular cancer, and other solid tumors. Of these approved drug/disease combinations, a subset also has regulatory agency-approved, commercially available companion/complementary diagnostic assays that were clinically validated using data from their corresponding clinical trials. The objective of this document is to provide evidence-based guidance to assist clinical laboratories in establishing fit-for-purpose PD-L1 biomarker assays that can accurately identify patients with specific tumor types who may respond to specific approved immuno-oncology therapies targeting the PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint. These recommendations are issued as 38 Guideline Statements that address (i) assay development for surgical pathology and cytopathology specimens, (ii) reporting elements, and (iii) quality assurance (including validation/verification, internal quality assurance, and external quality assurance). The intent of this work is to provide recommendations that are relevant to any tumor type, are universally applicable and can be implemented by any clinical immunohistochemistry laboratory performing predictive PD-L1 immunohistochemistry testing.

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