| Literature DB >> 32414860 |
Ryan J Sullivan1,2, Michael Dougan3,4, Meghan J Mooradian5,2, Daniel Y Wang6, Alexandra Coromilas7, Melissa Lumish8, Tianqi Chen9, Anita Giobbie-Hurder9, Douglas B Johnson6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immune-related colitis is a common, often serious complication of immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI). Although endoscopy is not strictly recommended for any grade of diarrhea/colitis, emerging evidence suggests that endoscopic evaluation may have important therapeutic implications. In this retrospective study, we sought to comprehensively characterize the clinical and histologic features of ICI-induced colitis with a specific focus on evaluating the prognostic role of endoscopy.Entities:
Keywords: gastroenterology; immunology; oncology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32414860 PMCID: PMC7239692 DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2019-000451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Patients’ characteristics (n=130)
| Characteristics | All (n=130) |
| Age at start of ICI | 65 (22–95) |
| Age at onset of colitis | 65 (23–96) |
| BMI | 28 (14–53) |
| Gender | |
| Female | 48 (37%) |
| Male | 82 (63%) |
| Smoking history | |
| No | 72 (55%) |
| Yes | 58 (45%) |
| Baseline autoimmune conditions | |
| No | 107(82%) |
| Yes | 23 (18%) |
| Type of autoimmune conditions | |
| Endocrine | 10 (8%) |
| Rheumatologic | 5 (4%) |
| Gastrointestinal | 4 (3%) |
| Dermatologic | 3 (2%) |
| Neurologic | 1 (<1%) |
| Stage of melanoma | |
| III | 9 (7%) |
| IV | 121 (93%) |
| Type of primary | |
| Cutaneous | 99 (76%) |
| Mucosal | 7 (5%) |
| Ocular | 10 (8%) |
| Unknown primary | 14 (11%) |
| BRAF mutation | |
| No | 91 (70%) |
| Yes | 39 (30%) |
| Prior adjuvant therapy | |
| No | 114 (88%) |
| Yes | 16 (12%) |
| Prior systemic therapy | |
| No | 86 (66%) |
| Yes | 44 (34%) |
*Endocrine: hypothyroid (n=9), diabetes mellitus (n=1). Rheumatologic: PMR (n=2), rheumatoid arthritis (n=2), inflammatory polyarthropathy (n=1). Gastrointestinal: ulcerative colitis (n=3), celiac disease (n=1). Dermatologic: psoriasis (n=3). Neurologic: multiple sclerosis (n=1).
BMI, body mass index; ICI, immune checkpoint inhibition.
Treatment characteristics (n=130)
| Characteristics | All (n=130) |
| Duration of ICI, weeks | 6 (0–145) |
| No. of ICI doses before colitis | 3 (1–34) |
| Duration of steroids, weeks | 10 (0–147) |
| Type of ICI | |
| Adjuvant anti-CTLA-4 | 10 (8%) |
| Combination anti-CTLA-4/PD-1 | 35 (27%) |
| Single agent anti-CTLA-4 | 73 (56%) |
| Single agent anti-PD-1 | 12 (9%) |
| Grade of colitis | |
| I | 5 (4%) |
| II | 7 (5%) |
| III | 98 (75%) |
| IV | 20 (16%) |
| Intravenous steroids at any time | |
| No | 38 (29%) |
| Yes | 92 (71%) |
| Infliximab | |
| No | 78 (60%) |
| Yes | 52 (40%) |
| Flare of colitis | |
| No | 70 (54%) |
| Yes | 60 (46%) |
| No. of patients retreated with anti-PD-1 monotherapy | 49 (38%) |
| Best response (RECIST 1.1) | |
| CR | 12 (9%) |
| PR | 32 (25%) |
| SD | 36 (28%) |
| PD | 50 (38%) |
| PD on/after ICI | |
| No | 47 (36%) |
| Yes | 83 (64%) |
| Death | |
| No | 68 (52%) |
| Yes | 62 (48%) |
CR, complete response; ICI, immune checkpoint inhibition; PD, progressive disease; PR, partial response; SD, stable disease.
Figure 1Complications of immunosuppression. (A) Pie chart depicting the most common side effects of corticosteroid and/or secondary immunosuppressive administration. (B) Illustrating the breakdown of infectious complications.
Figure 2Consort diagram of the study cohort and analysis subgroups. ICI, immune checkpoint inhibition; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression-free survival; pts, patients.
Figure 3Correlation of endoscopy data and immunosuppression receipt. (A) Bar graph illustrating the percent of cases of colitis with and without ulceration and immunosuppressive needs. Presence of ulceration (Mayo Endoscopic Score (MES) 3) was associated with use of infliximab (p 0.008). (B) Need for immunosuppression by MES score. MES was significantly higher in patients who received infliximab compared with those who did not (p=0.003) with a median score of 2.5. (C) Differences in immunosuppressive need stratified by MES cohorts (MES 0 and MES 1–3). Nine of 12 (75%) MES grade 3 cases of colitis required infliximab. In contrast, only 18% (2/11) cases classified as MES 0 required tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α inhibition (p=0.007).
Figure 4Steroid duration by Mayo Endoscopic Score (MES). Steroid duration (days) across MES including the patients with enteritis. Duration of steroid use significantly increased alongside MES classification when MES was examined as a continuous variable, with steroid duration increasing in a linear fashion from zero to three (p=0.02).
Figure 5Overall survival (OS). (A) Kaplan-Meier curve showing the OS in our patient cohort. Median OS was 48.8 months (29.9–63.5). Gray overlay demonstrates the OS for the infliximab cohort (n=52). The infliximab subgroup is also included in the overall estimate of OS. (B) Conditional landmark analysis of OS in all patients alive and progression-free at 11 weeks. Gray curve represents all patients, blue those treated with steroids only and red, those who received steroids and infliximab.