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Humoral complementomics – exploration of noninvasive complement biomarkers as predictors of renal cancer progression

Margot Revel, Mikel Rezola Artero, Houcine Hamidi, Anne Grünenwald, L Puig Blasco, Yann Vano, Stéphane Oudard, Rafael Sanchez‐Salas, Petr Macek, Lara Rodríguez‐Sánchez, Xavier Cathelineau, Benoı̂t Vedie, Catherine Sautès‐Fridman, Wolf H. Fridman, Lubka T. Roumenina, Marie‐Agnès Dragon‐Durey

2024OncoImmunology27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Despite the progress of anti-cancer treatment, the prognosis of many patients with solid tumors is still dismal. Reliable noninvasive biomarkers are needed to predict patient survival and therapy response. Here, we propose a Humoral Complementomics approach: a work-up of assays to comprehensively evaluate complement proteins, activation fragments, and autoantibodies targeting complement proteins in plasma, which we correlated with the intratumoral complement activation, and/or local production, focusing on localized and metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC). In two prospective ccRCC cohorts, plasma C2, C5, Factor D and properdin were elevated compared to healthy controls, reflecting an inflammatory phenotype that correlated with plasma calprotectin levels but did not associate with CRP or with patient prognosis. Conversely, autoantibodies against the complement C3 and the reduced form of FH (a tumor neo-epitope reported in lung cancer) correlated with a favorable outcome. Our findings pointed to a specific group of patients with elevated plasma C4d and C1s-C1INH complexes, indicating the initiation of the classical pathway, along with elevated Ba and Bb, indicating alternative pathway activation. Boostrapped Lasso regularized Cox regression revealed that the most predictive complement biomarkers were elevated plasma C4d and Bb levels at the time of surgery, which correlated with poor prognosis. In conclusion, we propose Humoral Complementomics as an unbiased approach to study the global state of the complement system in any pathological plasma sample and disease context. Its implementation for ccRCC revealed that elevated C4d and Bb in plasma are promising prognostic biomarkers, correlating with shorter progression-free survival.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineComplement systemClear cell renal cell carcinomaRenal cell carcinomaAutoantibodyCancerContext (archaeology)Internal medicineKidney cancerImmunologyOncologyAntibodyBiologyPaleontologyComplement system in diseasesRenal Diseases and GlomerulopathiesBlood groups and transfusion