Literature DB >> 32128667

Clinical and radiation dose-volume factors related to pneumonitis after treatment with radiation and durvalumab in locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer.

Hiroto Inoue1, Akira Ono2, Takanori Kawabata3, Nobuaki Mamesaya1, Takahisa Kawamura1, Haruki Kobayashi1, Shota Omori1, Kazushige Wakuda1, Hirotsugu Kenmotsu1, Tateaki Naito1, Haruyasu Murakami1, Kazuaki Yasui4, Hirofumi Ogawa4, Tsuyoshi Onoe4, Masahiro Endo5, Hideyuki Harada4, Toshiaki Takahashi1.   

Abstract

Introduction Durvalumab has been shown to confer a survival benefit after definitive chemoradiotherapy in the patients with locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer, but no studies have attempted to identify risk factors for pneumonitis after durvalumab therapy. The purpose of this study was to investigate associations between clinical and radiation dose-volume factors, and the severity of pneumonitis. Methods We retrospectively assessed the cases of 30 patients who had been started on durvalumab therapy between July 2018 and February 2019. In this study we evaluated the percentage of lung volume receiving radiation dose in excess of 20 Gy (V20) as radiation dose-volume factor. We compared V20 and some baseline factors between a grade 0 or 1 (Gr 0/1) pneumonitis group and a grade 2 or more (≥Gr 2) pneumonitis group, and we performed a logistic regression analysis to establish the associations between variables and ≥ Gr 2 pneumonitis. Results Pneumonitis had developed in 22 patients (73.3%): Gr 1/2/3-5 in 8 (26.7%)/14 (46.7%) /0 (0%), respectively. The difference in V20 between the Gr 0/1 group and Gr 2 group (median: 20.5% vs. 23.5%, p = 0.505) was not statistically significant, and thus V20 was not a risk factor for Gr 2 pneumonitis (odds ratio: 1.047, p = 0.303). None of the clinical factors, including sex, age, smoking history, presence of baseline pneumonitis, type of radiation therapy, location of lesion and facility, were risk factors. Conclusions Our study suggest that the severity of pneumonitis after durvalumab is unrelated to V20 or any of the clinical factors assessed in this study.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Chemoradiotherapy; Durvalumab; Locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer; Pneumonitis; Risk factor; V20

Year:  2020        PMID: 32128667      PMCID: PMC7497668          DOI: 10.1007/s10637-020-00917-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Invest New Drugs        ISSN: 0167-6997            Impact factor:   3.850


Introduction

Definitive concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CRT) is a standard treatment for unresectable locally advanced non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC). Preclinical studies have shown that radiation therapy synergistically enhances the antitumor effects of immunotherapy, such as with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), by increasing tumor infiltration and upregulating PD-L1 expression [1, 2]. In addition to its synergistic effect, previous radiotherapy has been reported to activate the antitumor immune response by causing cell death and releasing neoantigen from these dead tumor cells [3, 4]. Durvalumab is an ICI that selectively binds to PD-L1 with high affinity [5]. Durvalumab has been shown to confer a survival benefit after definitive CRT in patients with locally advanced NSCLC in the PACIFIC trial [6, 7]. CRT sometimes causes radiation pneumonitis. A meta-analysis reported that the incidence of radiation pneumonitis is 5%–50% rate, and that the mortality rate is 1%–2% [8], but it is unknown whether combining ICI therapy with CRT increases the risk of pneumonitis. The incidence of any grade (Gr) pneumonitis in the durvalumab arm of the PACIFIC trial was 33.9%, and the incidence of Gr 3/4 pneumonitis was 3.4%. but the incidences in the Japanese subgroup were higher: any Gr, 73.6% and Gr 3/4, 5.6%. Lung V20, the percentage of lung volume receiving radiation dose in excess of 20 Gy, is the most common radiation dose-volume factor for radiation pneumonitis [9, 10]. Other risk factors for RP, including age, concurrent CRT regimen, location of the primary tumor lesion, and pre-existing lung disease, have also been reported [11-13], and female and never-smoker may be risk factors, but whether they are has been a matter of controversy [14, 15]. However, no studies have investigated whether any of these factors, including V20, are related to the development of pneumonitis after durvalumab administration following CRT, and there was no information about factors related to pneumonitis in the PACIFIC trial. We hypothesized that Lung V20 and other baseline clinical factors have an impact on the development of pneumonitis after durvalumab administration. The purpose of this study was to assess these factors for associations with the grade of pneumonitis.

Methods

Forty-one patients with stage III NSCLC received definitive CRT at our institution between April 2018 and December 2018, and 25 of these patients, with no progression after CRT, had been started on durvalumab between July 2018 and February 2019. Besides, another five patients received CRT at another institution and received durvalumab at our institution (Fig. 1). We retrospectively reviewed the data of these 30 patients. We decided whether CRT and durvalumab were indicated in each patient at a multidisciplinary conference. Durvalumab was administered in a dose of 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks until disease progression or intolerance, for up to 12 months. Twenty-one patients were treated with three-dimensional conformal radiation, and two patients were treated with intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). Seven patients were treated with proton beam therapy (PBT) after approval was obtained at a multidisciplinary conference. We selected to use IMRT/PBT when the irradiation doses to normal tissue, such as lung and spinal cord, were likely to exceed acceptable range. The total radiation dose in all patients was 60 Gy or 64 Gy.
Fig. 1

Flow diagram of the patients included in this study

Flow diagram of the patients included in this study We compared V20 and baseline clinical factors between two groups, a Gr 0/1 pneumonitis group and ≥ Gr 2 pneumonitis group, and performed a univariate and multivariate analysis of risk factors for the pneumonitis. We diagnosed pneumonitis on the basis of the CT scan or X-ray evidence when a patient had a fever or cough, and, in the absence of symptoms, by chance at follow-up. Patients with an apparent pulmonary infection or heart failure were excluded. The grade of pneumonitis was evaluated according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) v.5.0. The patients with Gr 1 pneumonitis at baseline who did not experience an exacerbation after durvalumab administration were classified as Gr 0, and those with an exacerbation, as Gr 2. These criteria were consistent with those used in the Pacific trial. Candidate variables for associations with Gr 2 pneumonitis included sex, age, smoking history, presence of Gr 1 pneumonitis at baseline, type of radiation therapy (X-ray or proton beam), location of the lesion (upper lobe or lower lobe), and facility where CRT was performed (our institution or other institution).

Statistical analysis

Comparisons between categorical variables were performed using Fisher’s exact test, and comparisons between continuous variables (V20) were performed using Wilcoxon test. A multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to establish associations between these variables and ≥ Gr 2 pneumonitis. A p value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant in all analyses.

Results

The patients’ characteristics are summarized in Table 1. Their median age was 68 years (range: 47–78 years). They included four patients who had received CRT for mediastinal lymph node (#3a, #4 L, #4R, #7) recurrence, and all four patients were in the upper lobe lesion group. The concurrent chemotherapy regimen was cisplatin + S-1 in 13 patients, carboplatin + paclitaxel in 7 patients, cisplatin + vinorelbine in 4 patients, daily carboplatin in 4 patients, and carboplatin + nab-paclitaxel in 7 patients. The PD-L1 tumor proportion score (TPS) with the 22C3 assay was calculated in 14 patients; 5 of them had a PD-L1 TPS <1%, and 4 of them had a PD-L1 TPS ≥50%.
Table 1

Characteristics of all patients and patients with Gr 0/1 and Gr 2 pneumonitis

AllGr 0/1Gr 2p value
Number301614
Age (years)≥70188100.284
<701284
SexMale191270.257
Female1147
Pathological typeAdeno16790.462
Squamous1385
Unknown110
Clinical stage (UICC-8th edition)IIIA11740.560
IIIB1147
IIIC422
LN re*431
LocationUpper lobe201280.442
Lower lobe1046
Smoking historyYes231490.204
No725
Baseline pneumonitisYes6420.657
No241212
RadiationX-ray2313100.204
Proton beam734
V20Median (range)22 (5–34)20.5 (5–34)23.5 (10–32)0.505

*LN re: lymph node recurrence

Characteristics of all patients and patients with Gr 0/1 and Gr 2 pneumonitis *LN re: lymph node recurrence The median follow-up time was 7.7 months (range: 2.9–10.4 months). Six of the 30 patients had Gr 1 pneumonitis at baseline, and the pneumonitis exacerbated to Gr 2 in 2 of them. Of the 24 patients with no pneumonitis at baseline, 20 patients developed pneumonitis after durvalumab administration: Gr 1 in 8 patients and Gr 2 pneumonitis in 14 patients, including 2 patients with pneumonitis at baseline. No patients developed Gr 3–5 pneumonitis. Thus, pneumonitis developed in 22 patients (73.3%), and that of each grade was as follows: Gr 1/Gr 2/Gr 3–5 in 8 (26.7%)/14 (46.7%)/0 (0%), respectively. The pneumonitis developed at a median interval of 2.2 months (range: 0.6–3.4 months) after the completion of radiotherapy and a median of 1.4 months (range: 0.5–2.1 months) after the final dose of durvalumab. No pneumonitis developed beyond the radiation field. Of the 14 patients with Gr 2 pneumonitis, 6 patients (27.3%) required prednisolone (PSL) therapy because their pneumonitis did not improve after durvalumab suspension, and all 6 patients recovered rapidly in response to PSL. In 10 patients (Gr 1: 3, Gr 2: 7), durvalumab could be re-administered after their pneumonitis was resolved. There were no exacerbations of pneumonitis during a median interval of 5.9 months (range: 1.1–7.5 months) after re-administration. The relation between the grade of pneumonitis and V20 is shown in Fig. 2. The results of the univariate analysis did not show a significant difference in V20 between the G 0/1 group and G2 group (median: 20.5% vs. 23.5%, p = 0.505, Wilcoxon test) (Table 1), and thus V20 could not be a risk factor for Gr 2 pneumonitis (odds ratio: 1.047, p = 0.303) (Table 2). Even when the cut-off value was set to 26% as in previous study [10], V20 could not be a risk factor (odds ratio: 2.25, p = 0.305). The results also showed that none of the other factors could be risk factors for Gr 2 pneumonitis (Table 2), and, thus, a multivariate analysis could not be performed.
Fig. 2

Relationship between grade of pneumonitis and V20. The cases are arranged in ascending order of their V20 values (plotted on the horizontal axis). Blue/green/red bars represent Gr 0/1/2 pneumonitis, respectively. “*” indicates treatment with proton beam therapy, and “<” indicates a case with Gr1 pneumonitis at baseline

Table 2

Univariate analysis of variables associated with Gr 2 pneumonitis

VariablesOdds ratiop value
Age (years)≥70 vs. <702.5000.237
SexMale vs. Female0.3330.163
Pathological typeAdeno vs. Squamous0.4860.343
LocationLower lobe vs. Upper lobe22500.305
Smoking historyYes vs. No0.2570.148
Baseline pneumonitisYes vs. No0.5000.470
RadiationProton beam vs. X-ray3.8890.148
FacilityOur institution vs. others0.5240.517
V20≥26 vs. <262.250.305
V20 (continuous)1.0470.303
Relationship between grade of pneumonitis and V20. The cases are arranged in ascending order of their V20 values (plotted on the horizontal axis). Blue/green/red bars represent Gr 0/1/2 pneumonitis, respectively. “*” indicates treatment with proton beam therapy, and “<” indicates a case with Gr1 pneumonitis at baseline Univariate analysis of variables associated with Gr 2 pneumonitis

Discussion

We report the relation of V20 and some baseline clinical factors to the grade of pneumonitis after durvalumab administration following CRT. Although radiation pneumonitis has reported to be associated with V20 and some clinical factors in the previous studies, the results of our study did not show a statistically significant association between any of the factors, including V20, and pneumonitis after durvalumab administration. To our knowledge, this is the first study to attempt to identify risk factors for pneumonitis after durvalumab administration. The incidence of pneumonitis in this study was almost the same as in the Japanese subgroup of the PACIFIC trial. However, none of the patients in our study developed severe pneumonitis (Gr 3–5), and only a few patients developed severe pneumonitis in the PACIFIC trial. Since the Japanese clinical guideline for lung cancer state that patients with a V20 ≥ 35% are highly likely to develop radiation pneumonitis, we avoid irradiating such patients in consultation with radiation oncologists. This patient selection perhaps prevented the development of severe pneumonitis. Interestingly, a smaller percentage of patients with pneumonitis required PSL administration in our study (27.3%) than in the PACIFIC trial (62.1%), because the protocol of the PACIFIC trial recommended that all patients with Gr 2 pneumonitis be started on systemic steroid therapy promptly [6]. On the other hand, 7 (50%) of the 14 patients with Gr 2 pneumonitis in our study were cured by durvalumab suspension alone. This may be explained by the fact that we monitored the course of pneumonitis without PSL therapy for one to two weeks in accordance with the strategy for radiation pneumonitis [16]. Another reason might be that no pneumonitis developed beyond the radiation field because of proper radiation treatment planning. Not all patients with Gr 2 pneumonitis may require PSL therapy, but we could not identify the clinical differences between the group of patients who needed PSL and the group that did not, because the number of subjects was small. The results of this study did not show any statistically significant associations between V20 and the grade of pneumonitis after durvalumab administration. As stated above, there were no patients with a V20 ≥ 35% in this study. Tsujino K et al. [10] reported finding that the 6-month cumulative incidence of Gr 2 radiation pneumonitis increased with V20 even when V20 was less than 35%. The pneumonitis after durvalumab administration is induced by the ICI as well as by the radiation, so factors other than dosimetric factors such as V20 may be more important. Radiation therapy induces tumor cell death, which leads to an increase in tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) in the microenvironment and to upregulation of PD-L1 on the surface of the tumor [2]. These factors may be responsible for the differences in immune-related adverse events across patients or tumor types [17]. Similarly, biomarkers such as TILs and PD-L1 are likely to influence the severity of the pneumonitis after durvalumab administration. The pneumonitis that develops after durvalumab is different from radiation pneumonitis in terms of radiological features. Although it is difficult to distinguish between the two forms of pneumonitis, ICI-related pneumonitis has been reported to exhibit some specific radiological features, such as ground glass opacities (GGOs), a cryptogenic organizing pneumonia-like appearance, and interstitial pneumonia pattern [18]. Baba T et al. [19] reported that GGOs around the tumor (peritumoral infiltration) were a characteristic finding in pneumonitis induced by nivolumab. ICIs, including durvalumab, have caused pneumonitis in the rate of 2.7%–5% in some recent reports [20-22]. Few studies have identified baseline clinical factors associated with the ICI-induced pneumonitis. Naidoo J et al. [22] reported significant associations between both current/former smokers and underlying lung conditions and the worsening of pneumonitis by ICI monotherapy or ICI combination therapy. However, smoking history and baseline pneumonitis were not found to be risk factors in our study. Unfortunately, we were unable to identify any clinical factors associated with the pneumonitis after durvalumab administration following CRT. The involvement of both radiation and ICIs may complicate the detection of the risk factors for this pneumonitis. This study had two limitations. First, the subjects were a small number of patients at a single institution. Second, the follow-up period was too short to draw a conclusion. Although all of the cases of pneumonitis in this study developed within 3 months after the final durvalumab dose, pneumonitis is likely to develop after follow-up time. Further study with a longer follow-up time will be needed to confirm our results. In conclusion, the results of our study suggest that the severity of pneumonitis after durvalumab administration are unrelated to V20 or any other clinical factors that we assessed in this study. Further investigations are warranted, for finding out other factors that affect developing the pneumonitis.
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