| Literature DB >> 31559106 |
Tsutomu Nishida1, Hideki Iijima2, Shiro Adachi3.
Abstract
The indications of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICPIs) for cancer treatment have rapidly expanded, and their use is increasing in clinical settings worldwide. Despite the considerable clinical benefits of ICPIs, frequent immune-related adverse events (irAEs) have become nonnegligible concerns. Among irAEs, ICPI-induced colitis/diarrhea is frequent and recognized not only by oncologists but also by gastroenterologists or endoscopists. The endoscopic findings show similarity to those of inflammatory bowel disease to a certain extent, particularly ulcerative colitis, but do not seem to be identical. The pathological findings of ICPI-induced colitis may vary among drug classes. They show acute or chronic inflammation, but it may depend on the time of colitis suggested by colonoscopy, including biopsy or treatment intervention. In the case of chronic inflammation determined by biopsy, the endoscopy findings may overlap with those of inflammatory bowel disease. Here, we provide a comprehensive review of ICPI-induced colitis based on clinical, endoscopic and pathologic findings.Entities:
Keywords: Colitis; Diarrhea; Endoscopic; Immune checkpoint inhibitor; Pathologic
Year: 2019 PMID: 31559106 PMCID: PMC6751508 DOI: 10.4291/wjgp.v10.i2.17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastrointest Pathophysiol ISSN: 2150-5330
Figure 1Endoscopic findings caused by an immune checkpoint inhibitor.
Summary of endoscopic and pathological findings of immune-related diarrhea and colitis
| Endoscopic features | (1) Exudates; (2) loss of vascular pattern; (3) granular or edematous mucosa; (4) patch or diffuse erythema; (5) aphtha; (6) ulceration |
| Inflammatory distribution | (1) Diffuse; (2) patchy (dominantly more diffuse than patchy) |
| Risk factors for steroid-refractory colitis | (1) Extensively inflamed area ( |
| Anti-CTLA-4 associated colitis | Like autoimmune colitis: (1) lamina propria expansion due to dense lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate; (2) increased intraepithelial lymphocytosis; (3) apoptosis in the crypts; (4) neutrophilic cryptitis and crypt abscess; (5) occasional prominent eosinophilia in the lamina propria; (6) the lack of findings of basal plasmacytosis, crypt distortion, or granulomas |
| Anti-PD1/anti-PDL1-associated colitis | (1) Expansion of lamina propria by lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate; (2) the increase in intraepithelial neutrophils and neutrophilic crypt abscess; (3) crypt distortion; (4) increased crypt cell apoptosis |
CTLA-4: Cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen-4; PD1: Programmed cell death protein 1; PDL1: Programmed cell death receptor ligand 1.
Figure 2Programmed cell death protein 1 inhibitor-associated colitis. A: This colon biopsy reveals lamina propria expansion by lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate. Crypt distortion, crypt abscess, and cryptitis are prominent in the mucosa. In the stroma, a significantly increased eosinophilic infiltrate is observed; B: In another case of immune checkpoint inhibitors-related colitic mucosa, a subluminal collagen band thickening is prominent as observed in collagenous colitis. (Hematoxylin and eosin original magnification × 20, a scale bar represents 500 µm).
Definition of diarrhea and colitis based on Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events v5.0[32]
| Diarrhea | A disorder characterized by an increase in frequency and/or loose or watery bowel movements | 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; limiting instrumental ADL | Increase of ≥ 7 stools per day over baseline; hospitalization indicated; severe increase in ostomy output compared to baseline; limiting self-care ADL | Life-threatening consequences; urgent intervention indicated | Death | Clarification: Grade 2, 3, Definition |
| Colitis | A disorder characterized by inflammation of the colon | Asymptomatic; clinical or diagnostic observations only; intervention not indicated | Abdominal pain; mucus or blood in stool | Severe abdominal pain; peritoneal signs | Life-threatening consequences; urgent intervention indicated | Death | Addition: Navigational note; Clarification: Grade 3 |
ADL: Activities of daily living; CTCAE: Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events.
Summary of incidence of immune-related diarrhea and colitis
| Nivolumab | PD-1 | Topalian et al[ | 2012 | None | 296 | Solid cancer | 33 (11)/ND | 3 (1)/ND |
| Weber et al[ | 2013 | None ipilimumab-naive | 34 | Melanoma | 13 (38.2)/0 (0) | Not observed | ||
| Ipilimumab-refractory | 56 | 11 (19.6)/0 (0) | ||||||
| Weber et al[ | 2015 | None | 268 | Melanoma | 30 (11.2)/ND | 1 (0.4)/ND | ||
| Larkin et al[ | 2015 | None | 315 | Melanoma | 60 (19.2)/4 (1.3) | 7 (2.2)/2 (0.6) | ||
| Ferris et al[ | 2016 | None | 236 | SCCHN | 16 (6.8)/0 (0) | 0 (0)/0 (0) | ||
| Kang et al[ | 2017 | None | 330 | GC/GEJC | 23 (7)/2 (1) | 2 (1)/1 (< 1) | ||
| Pembrolizumab | PD-1 | Hamid et al[ | 2013 | None | 135 | Melanoma | 27 (20) | 1(1) |
| Garon et al[ | 2015 | None | 495 | NSCLC | 40 (8.1)/ND | 3 (0.6)/ND | ||
| Ribas et al[ | 2015 | None | 361 | Melanoma | 32 (8.9)/5 (1.4) | 2 (0.6)/2 (0.6) | ||
| Herbst et al[ | 2016 | None | 690 | NSCLC | 46 (6.7)/6 (0.9) | 2 (0.3)/4 (0.6) | ||
| Ribas et al[ | 2016 | None | 655 | Melanoma | 115 (18)/11(2) | 6 (1)/7 (1.1) | ||
| Mok et al[ | 2019 | None | 636 | NSCLC | 34 (5)/7 (1) | 5 (< 1)/4 (< 1) | ||
| Ipilimumab | CTLA-4 | Weber et al[ | 2008 | None | 88 | Melanoma | ND | 5 (5.6)/4 (4.5) |
| Weber et al[ | 2009 | None | 57 | Melanoma | 20 (35)/ND | 10 (18)/ND | ||
| budesonide | 58 | 19 (33)/ND | 8 (14)/ND | |||||
| Wolchok et al[ | 2010 | None | 214 | Melanoma | 58 (27)/ND | 11(5.1)/ND | ||
| Hodi et al[ | 2010 | None | 131 | Melanoma | 43 (32.8)/10 (7.6) | 7 (5.3)/7 (5.3) | ||
| gp100 | 380 | 146 (38.4)/20 (5.3) | 17 (4.5)/12(3.2) | |||||
| Robert et al[ | 2011 | Dacarbazine | 247 | Melanoma | 81 (32.8)/11 (4.5) | 10 (4.0)/5 (2.0) | ||
| Margolin et al[ | 2012 | None | 72 | Melanoma | 30 (42)/ND | 6 (8.3)/ND | ||
| Kwon et al[ | 2014 | None | 399 | Prostate cancer | 199 (51)/27 (7) | 64 (16)/18 (5) | ||
| Larkin et al[ | 2015 | None | 311 | Melanoma | 103 (33.1)/36 (11.6) | 19 (6.1)/27 (8.7) | ||
| Eggermont et al[ | 2016 | None | 471 | Melanoma | 194 (41.2)/73 (15.5) | 46 (9.8)/39 (8.2) | ||
| Ipilimumab plus nivolumab | CTLA4 and PD1 | Wolchok et al[ | 2013 | None | 53 | Melanoma | 18 (34.0)/5 (9) | 3 (6)/2 (4) |
| Larkin et al[ | 2015 | None | 315 | Melanoma | 138 (44.1)/37 (11.8) | 29 (9.3)/24 (7.7) | ||
| Schadendorf et al[ | 2017 | None | 407 | Melanoma | 30 (7.4)/40 (9.8) | 25 (6.1)/32 (7.9) | ||
| Wolchok et al[ | 2017 | None | 313 | Melanoma | 142 (45)/40 (13) | 29 (9)/26 (8) | ||
| Hellmann et al[ | 2017 | None | 77 | NSCLC | 16 (21)/4 (5.2) | 1 (1.3)/3 (3.9) | ||
| Motzer et al[ | 2018 | None | 547 | Renal cell carcinoma | 145 (27)/ND | 21 (4)/ND | ||
| Durvalumab | PD-L1 | Antonia et al[ | 2017 | None | 473 | NSCLC | 87 (18.3)/ND | 3 (0.6)/ND |
| Motzer et al[ | 2018 | None | 475 | NSCLC | 88 (18.5)/ND | 3 (0.6)/ND | ||
| Loibl et al[ | 2019 | None | 92 | Breast cancer | 26 (28.3)/ND | 3 (3.3)/ND | ||
| Atezolizumab | PD-L1 | Herbst et al[ | 2014 | None | 277 | Solid tumors or hematological malignancies | 29 (10.5)/ND | 0 (0)/ND |
| Rosenberg et al[ | 2016 | None | 311 | Urothelial carcinoma | 24 (8)/3 (1) | 1 (0.3)/2 (1) | ||
| Fehrenbacher et al[ | 2016 | None | 142 | NSCLC | ND | ND/2 (1) | ||
| Socinski et al[ | 2018 | ABCP | 393 | NSCLC | 70 (17.8) | 11 (2.8) | ||
| Avelumab | PD-L1 | Chung et al[ | 2019 | None | 150 | GC/GEJC | ND/2 (1.3) | ND/1 (0.7) |
| Barlesi et al[ | 2019 | None | 396 | NSCLC | 24 (6)/ND | 0 (0)/ND |
Dose-limiting colitis was not observed in this trial;
Progressed after ipilimumab;
Immune-related event;
No atezolizumab-related grade 4 but adverse events were reported, but only one patient showed Grade 5 cardiac failure. SCCHN: Squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck; NSCLC: Non-small-cell lung cancer; ABCP: Atezolizumab plus bevacizumab plus carboplatin plus paclitaxel; GC/GEJC: Gastric/gastroesophageal cancer; ND: Not described.