| Literature DB >> 30176946 |
Guacimara Ortega Sanchez1, Kathleen Jahn2, Spasenija Savic3, Alfred Zippelius1,4, Heinz Läubli5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The development of pulmonary immune-related adverse events (irAEs) in patients undergoing PD-(L)1 targeted checkpoint inhibitors are rare, but may be life-threatening. While many published articles and guidelines are focusing on the presentation and upfront treatment of pulmonary irAEs, the strategy in patients with late-onset pneumonia that are resistant to commonly used immunosuppressive drugs remains unclear. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Cancer immunotherapy; Immune checkpoint inhibitor; Immune-related adverse event; Lung; Pneumonitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30176946 PMCID: PMC6122461 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-018-0400-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Initial treatment of metastatic melanoma. a 18FDG-PET-CT scan of the patient when the metastatic disease was diagnosed. b 18FDG-positive lung lesion at the initial diagnosis of metastatic BRAF mutated melanoma. c Initial treatment response to BRAF and MEK inhibitors and to pembrolizumab over time
Fig. 2Histology of metastasis and organizing pneumonia. a, b Wedge resection of the lung after immunotherapy. The melanoma metastasis shows excellent response to treatment with extensive regressive necrosis. (HE, original magnification 25× and 200×, respectively). Here only melanin pigment and necrosis with lack of vital tumor cells are present. c, d Distant to the necrotic metastasis circumscribed areas of immunotherapy-induced organizing pneumonia with intraalveolar fibromyxoid proliferations and mild lymphoplasmacytic inflammation (HE original magnification 12,5× and 200×, respectively). (e) Immunhistochemical analysis of CD3+ cells in inflammatory lesions (200× magnification). f, g Staining of CD4+ (f) and CD8+ (g) cells (200× magnification). h Staining for FOXP3+ regulatory T cells in inflammatory lesions (200× magnification). i Immunostaining for PD-L1 in inflammatory lesions (100× magnification, SP-263 clone)
Fig. 3Response of pulmonary inflammatory lesions to immune suppressive therapy. a CT-scan at the time point when the inflammatory lesions were first detected after 2 years of pembrolizumab therapy. b Initial response to corticosteroid therapy (1 mg/kg prednisone). Pulmonary inflammatory lesions were clearly regressing after initial therapy. c CT-scan acquired during immune suppression with mycophenolate and after tapering of prednisone (before start infliximab). d CT-scan after 6 months of infliximab therapy. No inflammatory lesions can be observed anymore. e 18FDG-PET-CT scan after the infliximab therapy was stopped. A durable remission in terms of the melanoma and the pneumopathy was found
Overview of published pneumonitis cases upon PD-(L)1 blockade that received a treatment with infliximab
| Publication | Number of Patients (%) | Patients with pneumonitis (%) | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chen et al, [ | 1 | 1 | Corticosteroids |
| Lu et al, [ | 3 | 3 | Corticosteroids |
| Nishino et al, [ | 3 | 3 | Corticosteroids, 2 patients with infliximab |
| Naidoo et al, [ | 915 | 43 (5%) | Corticosteroids, 5 patients with infliximab |
| Nishino et al, [ | 170 | 20 (11.8%) | Corticosteroids, 3 patients with infliximab |