| Literature DB >> 33034044 |
Yada Kanjanapan1,2, Desmond Yip1,2.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Cancer; Immunotherapies; Infectious diseases; Respiratory tract infections
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33034044 PMCID: PMC7675256 DOI: 10.5694/mja2.50805
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med J Aust ISSN: 0025-729X Impact factor: 7.738
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Judicious use of combination anti‐CTLA-4 and anti‐PD-1/anti‐PD-L1 immunotherapy in patients requiring high tumour response rate with good organ functional reserve. Combination checkpoint therapy is associated with higher rate for immune‐related toxicities (eg, pneumonitis), which may potentially have an adverse impact on outcomes in patients with COVID‐19 Use of approved dosing schedule with longer duration between treatments (eg, nivolumab every 4 weeks, pembrolizumab every 6 weeks) Individualised assessment for pausing or cessation of immunotherapy in patients with controlled low disease burden Rapid assessment and COVID‐19 testing for patients receiving cancer immunotherapy who have clinical presentations with overlapping features for COVID‐19 and immune‐related adverse events Prevention of co‐infections: seasonal influenza vaccination for patients taking single‐agent immune checkpoint inhibitor (the use in combination checkpoint recipients should be individualised). Maintain current knowledge through professional journals, dynamic resource links (examples below) and webinars sharing clinical knowledge and experience internationally: Clinical Oncology Society of Australia (https://www.cosa.org.au/publications/covid‐19-updates/articles/) American Society of Clinical Oncology (https://www.asco.org/asco-coronavirus‐information) European Society for Medical Oncology (https://www.esmo.org/covid‐19-and‐cancer/covid‐19-full‐coverage)
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anti‐CTLA‐4 = anti‐cytotoxic T‐lymphocyte‐associated protein 4; anti‐PD‐1 = anti‐programmed cell death protein 1; anti‐PD‐L1 = anti‐programmed cell death ligand 1.