Plasma proteomics identifies an IL-6–associated SAA axis linked to muscle wasting in patients with cancer cachexia

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Abstract

Nearly half of patients with advanced lung cancer develop cachexia, a debilitating syndrome that worsens prognosis. We conducted longitudinal clinical and plasma proteomic profiling of 67 patients with non-small cell lung cancer, with and without cachexia, during first-line treatment. Patients with cachexia at diagnosis exhibited elevated risk of hospitalization and treatment-delaying toxicity. At diagnosis, 128 plasma proteins were upregulated and 67 downregulated in cachectic relative to non-cachectic patients. Longitudinal assessments of body composition, physical performance, metabolism, clinical outcomes, and nutritional risk revealed distinct fat and muscle wasting phenotype trajectories. 71 proteins were associated with fat loss, 92 with muscle loss, and 177 with concurrent muscle and weight loss. We identified and functionally validated 8 plasma proteins linked to muscle loss and adverse clinical outcomes. In a separate cohort of 147 patients with advanced pancreatic cancer receiving the interleukin-6 (IL-6) inhibitor tocilizumab, pharmacological suppression of serum amyloid A (SAA) levels following IL-6 inhibition suggests a systemic IL-6-SAA axis. These results collectively highlight SAA1 and SAA2 as IL-6-driven, cachexia-associated factors that reduce human myotube width. These findings uncover new potential therapeutic targets for cachexia.

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