TABLE 3.
Biomarker Type | When Biomarker Is Measured | What Biomarker Indicates |
---|---|---|
Prognostic | Prior to treatment | Indicates (estimates) the risk or likelihood that a patient who receives no further cancer-directed therapy will experience a specified clinical outcome, such as recurrence, progression, or death |
Predictive | Prior to treatment | Interpret with defined criteria to identify patients who are likely to benefit from a specific treatment compared with patients who do not meet the specified criteria |
Response indicator | During or after treatment | Demonstrates a pharmacological or physiological response to the treatment but does not necessarily signify patient benefit. Examples are declines in prostate-specific antigen, measures of tumor shrinkage, or pharmacodynamic changes in a parameter to show the on-target effect of a drug as proof of mechanism or to optimize dosing. |
Efficiency response (surrogate) | After treatment | Provides an early and accurate prediction of both a clinical end point and the effects of the treatment on that end point |
Source, Scher et al. (73). Copyright 2013 Macmillan Publishers Ltd. Reprinted with permission