| Literature DB >> 32418993 |
Vincent Ting Fung Cheung1,2, Tarun Gupta3,4, Anna Olsson-Brown5,6, Sreedhar Subramanian7, Sarah Christina Sasson3,4, Jonathan Heseltine5, Eve Fryer8, Elena Collantes8, Joseph J Sacco5,6, Munir Pirmohamed6, Alison Simmons3,4, Paul Klenerman3,4, Mark Tuthill9, Andrew S Protheroe4,9, Meenali Chitnis9, Benjamin Peter Fairfax4,9, Miranda Jane Payne4,9, Mark Ross Middleton4,9, Oliver Brain3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) improve survival but cause immune-related adverse events (irAE). We sought to determine if CTCAE classification, IBD biomarkers/endoscopic/histological scores correlate with irAE colitis outcomes.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32418993 PMCID: PMC7374736 DOI: 10.1038/s41416-020-0882-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Clinical features and management outcomes of patients with ICI-related colitis. p value in column denotes differences between Group A, Group B and Group C by Kruskal−Wallis test for continuous data or chi-square test for categorical data.
| Group A: Ipilimumab monotherapy | Group B: Anti-PD-1 monotherapy | Group C: Combination ipilimumab and nivolumab | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients with colitis ( | 42 (22) | 41 (6) | 51 (32) | 2 × 10−23 | 134 (13) |
| Onset of colitis since start of treatment (median days, interquartile range) | 64 (35–91) | 69 (29–150) | 40 (20–65)††, ‡ | <0.05 | 60 (28–88) |
| Median age of colitis patients (years, interquartile range) | 67 (57–76) | 70 (58–76) | 63 (56–68) | <0.05 | 66 (57–72) |
| Male sex in colitis patients ( | 28 (67) | 23 (56) | 30 (59) | 0.95 | 81 (60) |
| Colitis patients with hospital admission | 17 (40) | 19 (46) | 38 (75) | <0.0001 | 64 (48) |
| Days to first admission from onset of diarrhoea (Median, interquartile range) | 4 (3–6) | 3 (0–5) | 5 (3–10)†† | <0.05 | 4 (3–7) |
| Time from colitis onset to endoscopy (Median, interquartile range) | 12 (4–18) | ||||
| Length of first hospital stay in days for patients requiring admission (median, interquartile range) | 4 (3–8) | 5 (3–8) | 6 (3–10) | 0.37 | 5 (3–9) |
| Treatment | |||||
| Any steroids ( | 38 (90) | 29 (71) | 50 (98) | <0.001 | 117 (87) |
| IV steroids ( | 12 (29) | 14 (34) | 38 (75) | <0.001 | 58 (43) |
| Days of IV steroids in those receiving (median, interquartile range) | 3 (2–4) | 5 (3–8) | 4 (3–6) | 0.16 | 4 (3–6) |
| Total days on any steroids (median, interquartile range) | 59 (51–92) | 60 (31–102) | 66 (49–117) | 0.53 | 62 (47–100) |
| Infliximab ( | 4 (10) | 8 (20) | 17 (33) | <0.01 | 29 (22) |
| Colectomy ( | 2 (5) | 0 (0) | 1 (2) | 0.35 | 3 (2) |
Note patients who had anti-PD-1 therapy then anti-CTLA-4 therapy sequentially (or vice versa) because of progression on first-line treatment were recorded as monotherapy at the time of colitis.
n/a not applicable.
††p< 0.01 compared with Group B by Mann−Whitney test.
‡p < 0.03 compared with Group A by Mann−Whitney test with Bonferroni correction.
Fig. 1Presentation and treatment of immunotherapy-induced (irAE) colitis in this cohort (n = 1074) of patients.
a The incidence of colitis in single vs. combination immunotherapy (9% vs. 32%; Fisher’s exact test: p < 0.0001). b Onset of colitis after immunotherapy initiation (median 40 days in combination therapy vs. 68 days in monotherapy; Mann−Whitney test: p = 0.001). c 22% or 29 patients required infliximab for resolution of their colitis. Median duration of steroids in those who were treated with steroids alone was 50 days. d Number of patients requiring steroids monotherapy vs. steroids plus infliximab rescue therapy for treatment of their colitis; subdivided by immunotherapy regimen. Percentages requiring infliximab denoted in figure. Chi-squared test: p = 0.005 for difference between the CTLA4 and the combination therapy groups. e Mean duration of steroids in patients whose colitis responded to steroid monotherapy alone (patients requiring infliximab excluded); subdivided by immunotherapy regimen (median 56 days in anti-CTLA-4, 25 days in anti-PD-1, 54 days in combination; ANOVA: p = 0.04) (N.B. Data unavailable for 50% of patients in the aCTLA4 cohort).
Fig. 2CTCAE as predictor of disease severity and clinical course.
a Duration of steroids by CTCAE grade of diarrhoea shows difference between G1 and higher (G1 median 27 days, G2 64 days, G3 64 days, G4 73 days) (Kruskal−Wallis G1 vs. rest: p = 0.002) but no difference between other grades (Kruskal−Wallis: p = 0.92) (N.B. Treatment duration data not available for 15% (20) of patients). b Requirement for infliximab by CTCAE grade of diarrhoea shows no difference (chi-squared test: p = 0.18). c Proportion of patients by CTCAE grade of diarrhoea. d Requirement for infliximab by CTCAE grade of colitis shows patients with grade 3/4 colitis were more likely to be treated with infliximab than those with grade 1/2 (Fisher’s exact: p < 0.0001). e Duration of steroids by CTCAE grade of colitis shows difference between G1 and higher (G1 median 22 days, G2 58 days, G3 85 days, G4 65 days) (Kruskal−Wallis G1 vs. rest: p = 0.002) but no difference between other grades (Kruskal−Wallis: p = 0.23). f Proportion of patients by CTCAE grade of colitis.
Fig. 3Biochemical markers as predictor of disease severity and clinical course.
a C-reactive protein by treatment required for resolution of colitis (ANOVA: p = 0.12). b Haemoglobin by treatment required for resolution of colitis (ANOVA: p = 0.45). c Albumin by treatment required for resolution of colitis (ANOVA: p = 0.14).
Fig. 4Endoscopic predictors of disease severity and clinical course.
Patients classified by the treatment required for the resolution of their colitis into three groups—steroid monotherapy <60 days, steroid monotherapy >60 days, or requirement for infliximab in addition to steroids. UCEIS and Mayo scores as assessed by two independent assessors (κ = 0.51, 0.54 respectively). a UCEIS score by treatment required for resolution (ANOVA: p = 0.008).[30] b Mayo score by treatment required for resolution (ANOVA: p = 0.016).[30] c The correlation between the presence of ulcers at endoscopy and the odds of eventually requiring infliximab (Fisher’s exact test: p = 0.01, odds ratio 7.6). The correlation between the serum CRP (d) (Least squares fit: 8.9; not significant) and serum albumin (e) (Least squares fit: 0.27; not significant) with the severity of inflammation as assessed by the UCEIS score. f Characteristic endoscopy appearances during irAE colitis and after resolution. UCEIS ulcerative colitis endoscopic index of severity score, CRP C-reactive protein, irAE immunotherapy-related adverse events.
Fig. 5Histopathological predictors of disease severity and clinical course.
a Patterns of presentation of histology in irAE colitis. b Correlation between histological severity and endoscopic severity (Least squares fit = 0.51; p < 0.0001). c Need for infliximab defined by type of histopathological pattern. d Need for infliximab defined by histological severity of colitis (Nancy 1&2 vs. Nancy 3&4; chi-squared test = p = 0.03).[30].