| Literature DB >> 31791418 |
Vincent Pillonel1,2, Vincent Dunet3, Andreas F Hottinger1,4, Gregoire Berthod1,5, Luis Schiappacasse6, Solange Peters1, Olivier Michielin1,7, Veronica Aedo-Lopez8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICPis) have revolutionised the treatment of melanoma by significantly increasing survival rates and disease control. However, ICPis can have specific immune-related adverse events, including rare but severe neurological toxicity. CASEEntities:
Keywords: CNS demyelination; Immune checkpoint inhibitors; Immune related adverse events; Metastatic melanoma; Neurological toxicities; Nivolumab
Year: 2019 PMID: 31791418 PMCID: PMC6889661 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-019-0818-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Comparison of the appearance of metastasis and demyelinating lesion in this patient. a The patient was treated by stereotaxic radiotherapy in January 2018 for several brain metastases, the largest being located at the cortico-subcortical junction of the left precentral gyrus. The lesion appeared hypointense with central necrosis and large perilesional oedema on T2-weighted images, had complete ring enhancement on post-contrast T1-weighted images, and increased normalized cerebral blood volume (nrCBV = 1.2) and cerebral blood flow (nrCBF = 1.7) ratios on perfusion weighted images. b In June 2018, he developed several demyelinating lesions, the largest being located in the left superior frontal gyrus. Contrary to the brain metastasis, the lesion was juxtacortical, had little perilesional oedema, partial ring enhancement (i.e. open ring sign), and low nrCBV and nrCBF
Fig. 2Display of demyelinating lesions evolution over 6 months. Successive brain MRI are displayed on axial T2-weighted images (top row), axial (middle row) and sagittal (bottom row) T1-weighted images after i.v. infusion of gadolinium contrast media. a Baseline in April 2018 before CNS demyelination. b Demyelinating lesions were diagnosed in June 2018. The largest lesion was located in the juxtacortical white matter of the left superior frontal gyrus (arrows) while numerous small ovoid lesions (arrows’ head) were located deep in the periventricular fronto-parietal white matter with a long axis perpendicular to the ventricle, corresponding to the typical “Dawson fingers” pattern. c After nivolumab discontinuation, lesions enhancement progressively decreased in September 2018. d The lesions disappeared in December 2018, leading to the characteristic “black hole” pattern on T1-weighted images
Fig. 3Timeline of the patient’s clinical, therapeutic, and radiological course. The 11 cycles of nivolumab administration and its related onset and resolution of CNS demyelinating lesions are highlighted in red. A time reference has been included, with Day 0 referring to the day of onset of nivolumab treatment. Abbreviations: LN: lymph node; C: cycle; SRS: stereotactic radiosurgery; Dx: diagnosis; TT: treatment; DEX: dexamethasone; PD: progressive disease; PR: partial response; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; CT: computed tomography; CNS: central nervous system. *5 mg/kg; **1 mg i.d. for 7 days, and 5.25 mg tapered over 14 days