| Literature DB >> 28407743 |
Frank Kroschinsky1, Friedrich Stölzel2, Simone von Bonin2, Gernot Beutel3, Matthias Kochanek4, Michael Kiehl5, Peter Schellongowski6.
Abstract
Pharmacological and cellular treatment of cancer is changing dramatically with benefits for patient outcome and comfort, but also with new toxicity profiles. The majority of adverse events can be classified as mild or moderate, but severe and life-threatening complications requiring ICU admission also occur. This review will focus on pathophysiology, symptoms, and management of these events based on the available literature.While standard antineoplastic therapy is associated with immunosuppression and infections, some of the recent approaches induce overwhelming inflammation and autoimmunity. Cytokine-release syndrome (CRS) describes a complex of symptoms including fever, hypotension, and skin reactions as well as lab abnormalities. CRS may occur after the infusion of monoclonal or bispecific antibodies (MABs, BABs) targeting immune effectors and tumor cells and is a major concern in recipients of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) modified T lymphocytes as well. BAB and CAR T-cell treatment may also be compromised by central nervous system (CNS) toxicities such as encephalopathy, cerebellar alteration, disturbed consciousness, or seizures. While CRS is known to be induced by exceedingly high levels of inflammatory cytokines, the pathophysiology of CNS events is still unclear. Treatment with antibodies against inhibiting immune checkpoints can lead to immune-related adverse events (IRAEs); colitis, diarrhea, and endocrine disorders are often the cause for ICU admissions.Respiratory distress is the main reason for ICU treatment in cancer patients and is attributable to infectious agents in most cases. In addition, some of the new drugs are reported to cause non-infectious lung complications. While drug-induced interstitial pneumonitis was observed in a substantial number of patients treated with phosphoinositol-3-kinase inhibitors, IRAEs may also affect the lungs.Inhibitors of angiogenetic pathways have increased the antineoplastic portfolio. However, vessel formation is also essential for regeneration and tissue repair. Therefore, severe vascular side effects, including thromboembolic events, gastrointestinal bleeding or perforation, hypertension, and congestive heart failure, compromise antitumor efficacy.The limited knowledge of the pathophysiology and management of life-threatening complications relating to new cancer drugs presents a need to provide ICU staff, oncologists, and organ specialists with evidence-based algorithms.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Immunotherapy; Interdisciplinary management; Targeted therapy; Toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28407743 PMCID: PMC5391608 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-017-1678-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Different classes of new cancer drugs, frequently used agents, and main toxicities
| Agent | Target | Indications | Toxicities |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monoclonal antibodies | |||
| Rituximab | CD20 | B-cell lymphomas and leukemias | CRS |
| Trastuzumab | HER2neu | Breast cancer | Cardiac disease |
| Cetuximab | EGFR | Colorectal cancer | Diarrhea |
| Bevacizumab | VEGF | Colorectal cancer | Hypertension |
| Ramucirumab | VEGFR | Gastric cancer | |
| Tyrosine kinase inhibitors | |||
| Imatinib | BCR-ABL | CML | Pleural/pericardial effusions |
| Ponatinib | Thromboembolism | ||
| Erlotinib | EGFR | NSCLC | Exanthema, diarrhea |
| Idelalisib | PI3K | B-cell lymphoma | Pneumonitis |
| Trametinib | MEK | Melanoma | Diarrhea, edema |
| Aflibercept | VEGF | Colorectal cancer | Hypertension |
| Sorafenib | Multiple kinases | Renal cell cancer | Decrease of LVEF |
| Bispecific antibodies (BAB) | |||
| Blinatumomab | CD3/CD19 | ALL | CRS |
| Checkpoint inhibitors | |||
| Ipilimumab | CTLA-4 | Melanoma | IRAEs: |
| Nivolumab Pembrolizumab | PD-1 | Melanoma | |
| Cellular treatments | |||
| CAR T cells | CD19 | ALL | CRS |
CRS cytokine-release syndrome, VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor receptor, VEGFR vascular endothelial growth factor receptor, HER human epidermal growth factor receptor, GI gastrointestinal, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer, RCC renal cell cancer, LVEF left ventricular ejection fraction, CML chronic myeloid leukemia, ALL acute lymphoblastic leukemia, EGFR epidermal growth factor receptor, PI3K phosphoinositol-3 kinase, MEK MAP (mitogen-activated protein) kinase/ERK (extracellular signal-regulated kinase) kinase, PRES posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome, GIST gastrointestinal stromal tumors, CTLA-4 cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4, PD-1 programmed death receptor 1, IRAEs immune-related adverse events, CAR chimeric antigen receptor
Main symptoms of cytokine-release syndrome
| Constitutional | |
| Fever, chills, headache, asthenia, myalgia, arthralgia, back or abdominal pain | |
| Organ related | |
| Oliguria, bronchospasm, dyspnea, hypotension, tachycardia, arrhythmia, confusion, erythema, urticarial reaction, pruritus | |
| Lab tests | |
| Hypokalemia, increased urea, decreased glomerular filtration rate, altered blood counts and/or coagulation tests, elevation of C-reactive protein and/or procalcitonin |
NCI recommendation for the use of tocilizumab in patients with CAR T-cell-associated CRS (according to [9])
| Tocilizumab 4 to 8 mg/kg i.v. (1-h infusion, maximum 800 mg) | |
|---|---|
| (1) Decrease of LVEF <40% assessed by echocardiogram | |
| (2) Increase of creatinine >2.5-fold compared to baseline | |
| (3) Norepinephrine support (>2 μg/min) for 48 h since start of vasopressors (even if non-continuous administration) | |
| (4) Decrease of systolic blood pressure <90 mmHG despite vasopressor support | |
| (5) Severe dyspnea potentially requiring mechanical ventilation | |
| (6) APTT >2× UNL | |
| (7) Persisting elevation (>5× UNL) of creatinine kinase longer than 48 h |
CRS cytokine release syndrome, CAR chimeric antigen receptor, i.v. intravenously, LVEF left ventricular ejection fraction, UNL upper normal limit, APTT activated partial thromboplastin time
Fig. 1Immune checkpoints: physiological function and mode of action of inhibiting monoclonal antibodies (checkpoint inhibitors). CTLA-4 cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4, PD-1 programmed death receptor 1, PD-L1 ligand of PD-1, CPI checkpoint inhibitor(s), APC antigen-presenting cell, MHC major histocompatibility complex, TCR T-cell receptor
Work-up of critically ill cancer patients admitted to the ICU suspected for an IRAE
| Basic evaluation |
| (1) When was the treatment with checkpoint inhibitor started and how many doses has the patient already received? |
| (2) Which is/are the leading symptom/s and when did it/they start? |
| (3) Which grading definition(s) according to NCI CTCAE is fulfilled? |
| (4) Rule out important differential diagnosis: pre-existing autoimmune condition, complication of underlying malignancy, infection |
| (5) What is the patient’s prognosis due to malignancy? |
| Initial management |
| (1) ICU monitoring, venous/arterial access, fluid load, vasopressors and oxygen supplementation, ultrasound, and/or CT scan as indicated |
| (2) Check common laboratory tests: hematology, chemistry (including renal and liver function tests), coagulation, endocrine function, microbial and viral infections, autoantibodies (e.g., ANA, AMA, SMA, LKM1, pANCA, TPOAb, TRAb, TGAb) |
| (3) If diagnosis of IRAEs is established, initiate steroid therapy at 1–2 mg/kg of body weight OR, if patient is already on steroids, consider increase of dose (up to 5 mg/kg or equivalent) |
| (4) Involve organ specialists: gastroenterology, endocrinology, and neurology, surgery (if perforation or ileus is suspected) |
| Advanced support |
| (1) If symptoms do not improve after 5–7 days, discuss additional immunosuppressive intervention (mycophenolate mofetil, tacrolimus) |
| (2) Consider endoscopy and colonic biopsies for patients with diarrhea/colitis, or liver biopsy in selected cases |
| (3) Evaluate specific recommendations for organ dysfunction: |
| (4) In responding events slowly taper steroids over 4 weeks; discuss duration of alternative immunosuppression (if needed) with organ specialist |
| (5) Checkpoint inhibition should be discontinued definitively after grade 3/4 IRAEs |
IRAE immune-related adverse event, ANA antinuclear antibodies, AMA antimitochondrial antibodies, SMA smooth muscle antibodies, LKM1 liver kidney microsomal antibodies, pANCA perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmatic antibodies, TPOAb thyroid peroxidase antibodies, TRAb TSH receptor antibodies, TGAb thyreoglobulin antibodies
Fig. 2Management of patients suspected or diagnosed with pneumonitis (risk stratification adapted from [26]). CMV cytomegalovirus, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, PCP Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia, PI3K phosphoinositol-3-kinase
Selected toxicities of antineoplastic pharmacotherapy and antiangiogenetic pathomechanisms (according to [39, 40, 44, 45, 50])
| Bevacizumab |
| → Arterial hypertension |
| Decreased endothelial production of nitric oxide with consecutive vasoconstriction |
| → Congestive heart failure |
| Disruption of physiological coronary angiogenesis |
| → Arterial thromboembolism |
| Reduction of anti-inflammatory effects and atherosclerotic instability |
| Dasatinib |
| → Pulmonary hypertension |
| Reduced hypoxic vasoconstriction |
| Dasatinib, nilotinib, ponatinib |
| → Cardiovascular events |
| Metabolic effects: hyperglycaemia, hyperlipidemia |
VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor, KIT stem cell factor receptor, PDGF platelet derived growth factor