Traditional biomarkers measure protein expression—the amount of protein present in tissue. This approach assumes that more protein equals more function. Clinical evidence repeatedly demonstrates this assumption is false.
Consider PD-L1 testing for immunotherapy selection:
"This tumor has high PD-L1 expression (TPS ≥50%), so the patient should respond to pembrolizumab."
Reality: Only 40-50% of PD-L1-high patients respond. Many PD-L1-low patients also respond. Expression alone has poor predictive accuracy.
"This tumor shows high PD-1/PD-L1 interaction by iFRET, indicating active checkpoint engagement."
Reality: Interaction state correlates with survival (P=0.05). Even "PD-L1 negative" patients can have detectable engagement—and may respond to therapy.
The protein must be functionally engaged—physically interacting with its partner, or in an activated conformational state—to have biological effect. Measuring abundance without measuring engagement misses the clinically decisive information.