| Literature DB >> 27777770 |
Bridgette A Kanz1, Megan H Pollack1, Romany Johnpulle2, Igor Puzanov3, Leora Horn2, Alicia Morgans2, Jeffrey A Sosman2, Suthee Rapisuwon4, R Martin Conry5, Zeynep Eroglu6, Douglas B Johnson2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anti-PD-1 therapy is increasingly used in various advanced malignancies. Patients with baseline organ dysfunction are largely excluded from clinical trials. Therefore it is unclear whether anti-PD-1 therapy is safe or effective in this setting. Further, these patients are often not candidates for other anti-cancer therapies, highlighting their need for active treatment options.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-PD-1; Cardiac; Dysfunction; Hepatic; Melanoma; Nivolumab; Organ; Pembrolizumab; Renal
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27777770 PMCID: PMC5067899 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-016-0166-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Baseline characteristics
| Baseline features ( | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Median age, years (range) | 69 (47–85) |
| Male | 23 (85) |
| ≥2 prior therapies | 20 (74) |
| Organ dysfunction | |
| Renal dysfunction | 17 (63) |
| Hepatic dysfunction | 7 (26) |
| Cardiac dysfunction | 11 (41) |
| 2 organ dysfunctions | 8 (30) |
| Received nivolumab | 16 (59) |
| Median number of doses (range) | 7 (1–52) |
| Disease state | |
| Renal cell carcinoma | 8 (30 %) |
| Melanoma | 10 (37 %) |
| Non-small cell lung cancer | 3 (11 %) |
| Small cell lung cancer | 2 (7 %) |
| Urothelial cell carcinoma | 4 (15 %) |
Immune-related adverse events
| irAE | Grades 1/2 (N, %) | Grades 3/4 (N, %) |
|---|---|---|
| Arthralgias | 1 (4 %) | 0 |
| Colitis | 0 | 1 (4 %) |
| Conjunctivis | 1 (4 %) | 0 |
| Diarrhea | 1 (4 %) | 0 |
| Hepatitis | 0 | 2 (7 %) |
| Hypothyroidism | 4 (15 %) | 0 |
| Nephritis | 2 (7 %) | 0 |
| Pruritis | 1 (4 %) | 0 |
| Rash | 3 (11 %) | 0 |
| Vitiligo | 1 (4 %) | 0 |
Organ dysfunction in individual patients
| Baseline organ dysfunction | Baseline measurements | Worsening dysfunction (grade) |
|---|---|---|
| Renal and hepatic | Creatinine 2.6, cirrhosis on imaging | Edema (1) |
| Renal | Creatinine 3.0 | Acute kidney injury (2) |
| Renal | Creatinine 2.2 | Ascites (3) |
| Renal | Creatinine 4.6 | Acute kidney injury (1) |
| Renal and cardiac | Creatinine 2.6, Ejection fraction 40 % | Acute kidney injury (1), volume overload (3) |
| Cardiac | Ejection fraction 30 % | Decompensated heart failure (3) |
| Cardiac | Ejection fraction 20 % | Decompensated heart failure (3) |
| Liver and cardiac | Ejection fraction 45 %, cirrhosis on imaging | Volume overload and decompensated heart failure (3) |
Response to therapy
| Response | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Complete response | 1 (4 %) |
| Partial response | 4 (15 %) |
| Stable disease | 11 (41 %) |
| Progressive disease | 11 (41 %) |
Fig. 1PET-CT for a patient with metastatic melanoma and baseline cirrhosis of the liver (a) and near complete response four months after initiating treatment (b)
Fig. 2Progression free (a) and overall survival (b) among the study population (median duration of follow-up 139 days)