| Literature DB >> 22253555 |
Charlotte Lemech1, Hendrik-Tobias Arkenau.
Abstract
The last 12 months have seen the beginning of a new era in the treatment options available for patients with metastatic cutaneous melanoma, a disease previously characterised by its poor prognosis and limited treatment options. Two mechanistically diverse agents have now demonstrated an overall survival benefit in different patient subgroups and further clinical trials are ongoing with emerging single agents and novel combinations. The first agent to demonstrate an overall survival benefit was the CTLA-4 antibody, ipilimumab, illustrating the importance of the immune system and immunomodulation in melanoma tumorigenesis. The second group of agents to show a survival benefit were the selective BRAF inhibitors, vemurafenib and GSK2118436, in patients who are BRAF V600 mutation positive. In addition, in the same BRAF mutant patient population, MEK inhibitors also show promising results and are currently under investigation in later stage trials. Although ipilimumab, BRAF and MEK inhibitors are just passing through the clinical trials arena, their use will rapidly become more widespread. Along with their significant clinical benefits, there are also unique adverse events related to these agents. Although the majority are mild and can be managed with supportive treatment, some toxicities require special management strategies. We outline up-to-date clinical development and management guidelines for ipilimumab, as well as the BRAF and MEK inhibitors.Entities:
Keywords: BRAF-inhibitor; MEK-inhibitor; cutaneous melanoma; diarrhea; fever; immune related adverse events; ipilimumab; ocular toxicity; skin rash; squamous cell carcinoma
Year: 2012 PMID: 22253555 PMCID: PMC3256981 DOI: 10.4137/CMO.S5855
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Med Insights Oncol ISSN: 1179-5549
Management of immune related adverse events from ipilimumab.
| Skin toxicity | Diarrhoea and enterocolitis | Hepatitis | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Supportive care | Sunscreen | Diet modification | If abnormal, monitor LFTs every 3–7 days |
| Initiation of corticosteroids | Budesonide for prolonged G2 diarrhoea | Methylprenisolone IV for ALT > 8 xULN and bilirubin > 5 xULN | |
| Other recommendations | Infliximab | Mycophenolate mofetil |
NHMRC levels of evidence.
| Level | Intervention |
|---|---|
| I | A systematic review of level II studies |
| II | A randomised controlled trial |
| III-1 | A pseudorandomised controlled trial (ie, Alternate allocation or other method) |
| III-2 | A comparative study with concurrent controls (non-randomised experimental trial, cohort study, case-control study, interrupted time series with a control group) |
| III-3 | A comparative study without concurrent controls (nistorical control study, two or more single arm study, interrupted time series without a parallel control group) |
| IV | Case series with either post-test or pre-test/post-test outcomes) |
Immune related adverse events from lpilimumab in phase 2 and 3 trials.
| Patient number (n =) | Phase III | Phase-III | Phase-II |
|---|---|---|---|
| All grade irAE % [Grade 3, 4%] | 77.7 [31.6, 10.1] | 61.1 [12.2, 2.3] | 65 at 3 mg/kg [7] |
| Dermatologic % [Grade 3, 4%] | 43.5 [1.5, 0] | 45 at 3 mg/kg [1.5] | |
| Pruritus% | 26.7 [2.0, 0] | 24.4 [0, 0] | 21.3 at 3 mg/kg [1.4] |
| Rash | 22.3 [1.2, 0] | 19.1 [0.8, 0] | 23.9 at 3 mg/kg [1.4] |
| Vitiligo | 2.3 [0, 0] | ||
| Gastrointestinal % [Grade 3, 4%] | 29 [7.6, 0] | 32 at 3 mg/kg [2.8] | |
| Diarrhoea % | 32.8 [4.0, 0] | 27.5 [4.6, 0] | 25.3 at 3 mg/kg [1.4] |
| Colitis | 4.5 [1.6, 0.4] | 7.6 [5.3, 0] | 5.6 at 3 mg/kg [1.4] |
| Endocrine % [Grade 3, 4%] | 7.6 [2.3, 1.5] | 5.6 at 3 mg/kg [2.8] | |
| Hypothyroid % | 1.5 [0, 0] | ||
| Hypopituitarism | 2.3 [0.8, 0.8] | ||
| Hypophysitis | 1.5 [1.5, 0] | ||
| Adrenal insufficiency | 1.5 [0, 0] | ||
| Increase thyrotropin | 0.8 [0, 0] | ||
| Decrease corticotrophin | 1.5 [0, 0.8] | ||
| Hepatic % [Grade 3, 4%] | 3.8 [0, 0] | 0 at 3 mg/kg | |
| Increase ALT % | 29.1 [15.0, 5.7] | 1.5 [0, 0] | |
| Increase AST | 26.7 [13.8, 3.6] | 0.8 [0, 0] | |
| Hepatitis | 1.6 [1.2, 0] | 0.8 [0, 0] |
Abbreviations: irAE, immune related adverse event; DTIC, dacarbazine; Ipi, ipilimumab; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase.
CTCAE grading for diarrhoea, changes in liver function tests and visual changes.
| Grade 1 | Grade 2 | Grade 3 | Grade 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diarrhoea | Increase of <4 stools per day over baseline; mild increase in ostomy output compared to baseline | Increase of 4–6 stools per day over baseline; moderate increase in ostomy output compared to baseline | Increase of ≥7 stools per day over baseline; incontinence; hospitalization indicated; severe increase in ostomy output compared to baseline; limiting self care ADL | Life-threatening consequences; urgent intervention indicated |
| Bilirubin | ULN – 1.5 xULN | 1.5 xULN – 3.0 xULN | 3.0 xULN – 10 xULN | >10 xULN |
| AST/ALT | ULN – 3.0 xULN | 3.0 xULN – 5.0 xULN | 5.0 xULN – 20 xULN | >20.0 xULN |
| Visual changes | Asymptomatic or mild symptoms; clinical or diagnostic observations only; intervention not indicated | Moderate; minimal, local or noninvasive intervention indicated; limiting age-appropriate instrumental ADL | Severe or medically significant but not immediately sight-threatening; Hospitalization or prolongation of existing hospitalization indicated; disabling; limiting self care ADLs | Sight-threatening consequences; urgent intervention indicated; blindness (20/200 or worse) in the affected eye |
Abbreviations: AST, aspartate aminotransferase; ALT, alanine aminotransferase.