| Literature DB >> 30746132 |
Hassan Izzedine1,2, Alexis Mathian3, Stephane Champiat4, Cécile Picard5, Christine Mateus6, Emilie Routier7, Andrea Varga4, David Malka8, Alexandra Leary9, Judith Michels9, Jean-Marie Michot4, Aurélien Marabelle4, Olivier Lambotte10, Zahir Amoura3, Jean-Charles Soria4, Sihem Kaaki11, Nathalie Quellard11, Jean-Michel Goujon11, Isabelle Brocheriou5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Expanded clinical experience with patients treated by pembrolizumab has accumulated. However, renal toxicities associated with this anti-programmed cell death 1 agent are poorly described because kidney histology is rarely sought. As a nephrology referral centre, we aimed to describe the clinic-biological and histopathological characteristics of pembrolizumab-related nephropathy and its response to treatment.Entities:
Keywords: acute interstitial nephritis; acute kidney injury; acute tubular injury; minimal change nephropathy; pembrolizumab
Year: 2018 PMID: 30746132 PMCID: PMC6366307 DOI: 10.1093/ckj/sfy100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Kidney J ISSN: 2048-8505
Characteristics of patients with biopsy-proven pembrolizumab-related renal involvement
| Number of patients | 12 patients |
| Demography | |
| Gender | 7 M/5 F |
| Age, years, median (IQR) | 69.75 (46–84) |
| Comorbidities | |
| HT | 5 |
| Diabetes | 1 |
| MGUS IgG | 1 |
| Horton disease | 1 |
| Cancer type | |
| Metastatic melanoma | 9 |
| Hodgkin lymphoma | 1 |
| Endometrial carcinoma | 1 |
| Ileal NET | 1 |
| Previous anti-cancer drugs | |
| Cisplatin/VP16 | 1 |
| Carboplatin/taxol | 1 |
| Ipilimumab | 1 |
| Dabrafenib/trametinib | 1 |
| Renal involvement at presentation | |
| Time to KB, months (IQR) | 9 (1–24) |
| Renal abnormalities | |
| AKI | 11 |
| NS | 2 |
| Proteinuria | 1 |
| Microscopic haematuria | 3 |
| Aseptic leucocyturia | 4 |
| Histological characteristics | |
| AIN | 6 |
| Plasma cell infiltration | 6 |
| + Tubulitis/ATI | 6 |
| + Interstitial fibrosis, % (IQR) | 18.75 (0–50) |
| ATI | 4 |
| MCD | 2 |
| Crystal | 1 |
| Superimposed NAS | 10 |
IQR: interquartile range; F, female; HT, hypertension; M, male; MGUS: monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance; NAS: nephroangiosclerosis.
FIGURE 1Pathological findings in pembrolizumab-related nephropathies (Masson’s trichrome). (A) Nephron segments with flattened tubular epithelium and loss of brush border defining ATI. (B) AIN with interstitial oedema and lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate associated with tubulitis. (C) Preserved cortical area with normal-appearing glomerulus in this patient with NS.
FIGURE 2Diffuse foot process effacement (magnification ×6000)
Evolution of renal function during follow-up [range (SD)]
| Months | At KB | At the end of follow-up | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Delay | 1–24 months (9.0 ±7.4) | 1–36 months (13.1 ± 14.1) | ||
| All patients, | SCr | 70–147 (96.4 ± 24.1) | 120–295 (184.5 ± 63.0) | 90–190 (126.4 ± 28.2) |
| ICPIs stopped, | ||||
| With Cs | SCr | 60–120 (87.4 ± 19.5) | 144–295 (191.5 ± 56.1) | 90–155 (119.6 ± 24.6) |
| Without Cs | SCr | 80–123 (101 ± 21.5) | 120–170 (141.6 ± 25.6) | 104–190 (140.6 ± 44.3) |
| ICPI maintained, | ||||
| Pt 1 Cs+ | SCr | 95 | 172 | 118 |
| Pt 2 Cs− | SCr | 147 | 145 | 133 |
MDRD, Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (mL/min/1.73 m2); Cs, corticosteroid.
Pathological findings in 12 patients receiving pembrolizumab
| Patients | ATI | Interstitial inflammation | Glomeruli | Interstitial scar (percentage of cortical area) | Vascular changes | Final diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pt 1 | + (crystal) | 0 | Normal, ischaemic; area of cortical atrophy with numerous sclerotic glomeruli | 60 | cv3 | ATI |
| Pt 2 | ++ | 0 | Normal, ischaemic | 15 | cv2, myocyte cytoplasmic vacuolization | MCD, ATI |
| Pt 3 | + | 0 | Normal | 10–15 | cv2, ah1 | ATI |
| Pt 4 | + | +++ | Normal | 60 (fibro-edema) | cv1, ah2 | AIN |
| Pt 5 | 0 | + focal | Normal, ischaemic | 25 | cv3, myocyte cytoplasmic vacuolization | ATI |
| Pt 6 | + | 0 | Normal | 15 (fibro-edema) | cv3 | MCD |
| Pt 7 | 0 | 0 | Normal | 10 | cv1 | NC |
| Pt 8 | ++ | +++ | Normal, ischaemic | 100 (fibro-edema) | cv1 | AIN |
| Pt 9 | + (with cytoplasmic clarification) | 0 | Normal | 20 | cv3, ah1 | ATI |
| Pt 10 | + | 0 | Normal | 20 (fibro-edema) | cv1 | ATI |
| Pt 11 | + | +++ | Normal, sclerosis (25%) | 50 (fibro-edema) | cv1 | AIN |
| Pt 12 | + | +++ | Normal, sclerosis (10%) | 60 (fibro-edema) | cv3 | AIN |
With tubulitis.
ah, arteriolar hyalinosis; cv, chronic vascular changes (fibrous intimal thickening); NC, nonspecific changes.
Summary of renal effects of immune checkpoint inhibition
| CTLA-4 antagonists | PD-1 inhibitors | |
|---|---|---|
| AIN | Common: 6–12 weeks after initiation | Common: 3–12 months after initiation |
| Glomerular findings | Cases | Cases |
| Outcomes after kidney transplantation | No transplant rejection (2 patients) | Transplant rejection (7 out of 10 patients) |
Source: Adapted from Jhaveri and Perazella [13].
Clinical characteristics of patients under pembrolizumab (ATI versus AIN)
| ATI ( | AIN ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 59–84 | 62–86 |
| Gender | 3 M | 3 F |
| SBP, mmHg | 125–150 | 150 |
| DBP, mmHg | 70–90 | 70–80 |
| Underlying AKI risk factors | HT (5) | HT (1) |
| T2DM (1) | T2DM (1) | |
| IHD (1) | MGUS (1) | |
| Carcinoid HD (1) | Horton disease (1) | |
| Stroke (1) | ARA (1) | |
| ARA (4) and Diuretic (3) | ||
| Previous chemotherapy | Platin (2), ipilimumab (1) | Dabrafenib, trametinib (1) |
| Cancer | Melanoma (3) | Melanoma (4) |
| Ileal NET (1) | ||
| Endometrial (1) | ||
| Vascular changes on KB | Discrete to moderate | Normal to discrete |
SBP, systolic blood pressure; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; HT, hypertension; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus; IHD, ischaemic heart disease; ARA, angiotensin receptor antagonist; M, male; F, female; MGUS, monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance.
Clinicopathological features of cancer patients with glomerular diseases associated with ICPIs use
| Drug [Ref] | Cancer type | Prior therapy and potential nephrotoxins | Timing of glomerular disorders | Renal findings and kidney function | Kidney pathological findings | Clinical course |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ipilimumab [ | Melanoma | conventional chemotherapy | 6 weeks | NS: SAlb 2.45 g/dL, Pu 7.5 g/day SCr 49 µmol/L | Lupus-like MN | 12 months after diagnosis, only non-nephrotic proteinuria (1 g per day) persisted after discontinuation of ipilimumab therapy and a short course of steroid |
| Ipilimumab [ | Melanoma | TMZ, sorafenib | 18 months | NS: SAlb 2.6 g/dL, Pu 9.5 g/day SCr 49 µmol/L | MCD | Proteinuria largely remitted (0.39 g/day) following discontinuation of ipilimumab and treatment with corticosteroids (prednisone, 1 mg/kg) initiated and tapered over 4 months |
| Ipilimumab restarted | 4 months | Recurrence of NS | Ipilimumab therapy was again discontinued, with subsequent remission of proteinuria | ||
| Ipilimumab [ | Melanoma | not reported | 2 weeks | NS: SAlb 2.2 g/dL, Pu 9 g/day AKI: SCr 261 µmol/L | MCD and AIN | Renal function improved and NS resolved under high-dose steroids |
| Nivolumab [ | Papillary RCC | not reported | 8 weeks | NS: SAlb 1.9 g/dL, Pu 17 g/day AKI: SCr 261 µmol/L | FSGS | High-dose corticosteroids + mycophenolate mofetil resulted in remission of the NS and recovery of renal function. Proteinuria subsequently relapsed during corticosteroid tapering |
| Nivolumab [ | LSCC | not reported | 6 months | Pu 3 g/day and micro- haematuria AKI: SCr 119 µmol/L | IgA nephropathy | Improvement of proteinuria (0.24 g/day) and AKI (SCr, 132 µmol/L) 4 months following cessation of nivolumab therapy |
| Nivolumab [ | RCC | pazopanib | 10 months | Pu 3 g/day and micro- haematuria AKI: SCr 880 µmol/L | Crescentic IgA nephropathy + ATI | After 5 months of cessation of nivolumab, high dose of steroids and haemodialysis, the patient’s kidney function improved to his baseline level (159 µmol/L) |
| Pembrolizumab [ | Hodgkin lymphoma | not reported | 4 weeks | NS: SAlb 1.8 g/dL, Pu 10.3 g/day AKI: SCr 346 µmol/L | MCD and ATI | Improvement of proteinuria (3.1 g/day) and AKI (SCr, 132 µmol/L) 6 months following cessation of pembrolizumab therapy with tapering corticosteroid treatment |
| Pembrolizumab [ | Mesothelioma | CPV | 8 weeks | NS: SAlb 1.5 g/dL, Pu 19 g/day AKI: SCr 346 µmol/L | MCD | Creatinine values normalized and proteinuria resolved within 5 days following cessation of pembrolizumab with initiation of prednisone and angiotensin II receptor blocker |
| Pembrolizumab [ | Melanoma | ipilimumab, dacarbazine | 1 week | Proteinuria, haematuria SCr not available Purpura, positive PR3-ANCA | KB not performed Skin biopsy showed Non-Ig-Cpt vasculitis | Diagnosis of granulomatosis with polyangiitis after sequential immune checkpoint inhibition with ipilimumab and pembrolizumab and improvement after 3 weeks of high-dose steroids and cyclophosphamide (CYP) |
| Pembrolizumab, our case | Melanoma | not reported | 4 weeks | NS: SAlb 1.7 g/dL, Pu 6 g/day GFR from 90 to 28 mL/min | MCD and ATI | Improvement of proteinuria under steroid treatment. However, patient was dialysed for 1 month and died because of melanoma evolution |
| Pembrolizumab, our case | Ileal NET | cisplatin, VP16 | 18 months | SAlb 4.2 g/dL, Pu 3.5 g/day AKI: SCr 146 µmol/L | MCD | No change on renal parameters under maintenance of pembrolizumab without steroids |
Cpt, complement; CPV, carboplatin pemetrexed vinorelbine; Pu, proteinuria; SAlb, serum albumin level; TMZ, temozolomide.