| Literature DB >> 33067316 |
Dimitrios C Ziogas1, Frosso Kostantinou1, Evangelos Cholongitas1, Amalia Anastasopoulou1, Panagiotis Diamantopoulos1, John Haanen2, Helen Gogas3.
Abstract
In the evolving immune-oncology landscape, numerous patients with cancer are constantly treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICPIs) but among them, only sporadic cases with pre-existing hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) are recorded. Despite the global dissemination of HBV and HCV infections, viral hepatitis-infected patients with cancer were traditionally excluded from ICPIs containing trials and current evidence is particularly limited in case reports, retrospective cohort studies and in few clinical trials on advanced hepatocellular carcinoma. Thus, many concerns still remain about the overall oncological management of this special subpopulation, including questions about the efficacy, toxicity and reactivation risks induced by ICPIs. Here, we examine the natural course of both HBV and HCV in cancer environment, review the latest antiviral guidelines for patients undergoing systematic cancer therapies, estimating treatment-related immunosuppression and relocate immunotherapy in this therapeutic panel. Among the ICPIs-treated cases with prior viral hepatitis, we focus further on those experienced HBV or HCV reactivation and discuss their host, tumor and serological risk factors, their antiviral and immunological management as well as their hepatitis and tumor outcome. Based on a low level of evidence, immunotherapy in these specific cancer cases seems to be associated with no inferior efficacy and with a relevantly low reactivation rate. However, hepatitis reactivation and subsequent irreversible complications appeared to have poor response to deferred antiviral treatment. While, the prophylactic use of modern antiviral drugs could eliminate or diminish up front the viral load in most cases, leading to cure or long-term hepatitis control. Taking together the clinical significance of preventive therapy, the low but existing reactivation risk and the potential immune-related hepatotoxicity, a comprehensive baseline assessment of liver status, including viral hepatitis screening, before the onset of immunotherapy should be suggested as a reasonable and maybe cost-effective strategy but the decision to administer ICPIs and the necessity of prophylaxis should always be weighed at a multidisciplinary level and be individualized in each case, up to be established by future clinical trials. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: immunotherapy; review
Year: 2020 PMID: 33067316 PMCID: PMC7570225 DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2020-000943
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
HBVr risk groups in patients with cancer according to their anticipating immunosuppressive treatment
| Risk group | HBVr rate (%) | Hepatitis condition | Anti-HBc | HBsAg status | Anticipating immunosuppressive anticancer treatments |
| Very high risk | >20 | Chronic infection | Anti-HBc(+) | HBsAg(+) | Anti-CD20 therapy (ie, rituximab, ofatumumab, obinutuzumab) or hematopoietic SCT. |
| High risk | 11–20 | Chronic infection | Anti-HBc(+) | HBsAg(+) | High-dose steroids (ie, ≥20 mg/day for at least 4 weeks); anthracycline derivatives such as doxorubicin and epirubicin; or the anti-CD52 agent, alemtuzumab. |
| Moderate risk | 1–10 | Chronic infection | Anti-HBc(+) | HBsAg(+) | Cytotoxic chemotherapy without steroids; anti-TNF therapy; cytokine and integrin inhibitors, tyrosine kinase inhibitors, or anti-rejection therapy for solid organ transplants. |
| Clinically resolved infection | Anti-HBc(+) | HBsAg(−) | Anti-CD20 therapy or hematopoietic SCT. | ||
| Low risk | <1 | Chronic infection | Anti-HBc(+) | HBsAg(+) | Methotrexate or azathioprine and any dose of steroids lasting less than a week or low-dose (eg, <10 mg prednisone daily) lasting greater than or equal to 4 weeks. |
| Clinically resolved infection | Anti-HBc(+) | HBsAg(−) | High-dose glucocorticoids (eg, ≥20 mg/day) or the anti-CD52 agent, alemtuzumab. | ||
| Very low risk | Rarely occurs | Clinically resolved infection | Anti-HBc(+) | HBsAg(−) | Cytotoxic chemotherapy without steroids, anti-TNF therapy, methotrexate or azathioprine. |
| Uncertain risk | Clinically resolved infection | Anti-HBc(+) | HBsAg(−) | Solid organ transplant influenced by the type and the degree of used immunosuppressive therapy. |
anti-HBc, anti-hepatitis B core antibody; HBsAg, hepatitis B surface antigen; HBV, hepatitis B virus; HBVr, HBV reactivation; SCT, stem cell transplantation; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.
Published cases of HBV and HCVr in patients with cancer treated with immunotherapy
| A/a | First author, year | Age (gender) | Cancer type | Type of ICPI | Baseline | Baseline hepatitis panel | Baseline | Antiviral prophylaxis | Duration on ICPI at reactivation | Reactivation | Reactivation | Management of ICPI | Antiviral treatment | Time for undetectable HBV DNA (weeks) | Time for ALT (ULN:56 U/L) and AST (ULN:40 U/L) recovery (weeks) |
| 1 | Lake, 2017 | 72 (M) | NSCLC stage IIIa TTF-1 (+) | Nivolumab | <20 | Anti-HBc: (+) HBsAg: (−) | Normal | Two doses of HBV vaccine (July 2014 and November 2015) | 4 weeks | HBV DNA>170,000,000 | AST: 301 U/L | Delayed for 3 months | Switched from abacavir to TDF but patient declined adding of third drug to ART | Not achieved on follow-up (16 weeks) but significantly decreasing | ALT/AST: normalized after 12 and 16 weeks, respectively |
| 2 | Pandey, 2018 | 51 (M) | NSCLC stage IV TTF-1 (+) | Pembrolizumab | No baseline hepatitis panel | No baseline hepatitis panel | Normal | None | 4 weeks | HBV DNA: | AST: 670 U/L, | Delayed | TNF before hepatitis workup, administration high-dose steroids for potential autoimmune hepatitis | 10 weeks | 10 weeks |
| 3 | Koksal, 2017 | 56 (M) | Melanoma stage IV | Ipilimumab (September 2016) after four cycles switched to Nivolumab due to AST/ALT increase | Unknown | HBsAg: (+) | Normal | None | 8 weeks | HBV DNA: 244.259 IU/mL | AST: 164 U/L, | Switched ipilimumab to nivolumab | TDF 245 mg once daily (started after the first cycle of nivolumab) | HBV DNA: 183 IU/mL, after 8 weeks of TNF | ALT/AST significantly decreased (56 U/L and 50 U/L, respectively) after 8 weeks of TNF |
| 4 | Akar, 2019 | 62 (M) | Clear-cell RCC stage IV | Nivolumab (prior treatments: sunitinib, axitinib and RT) | Undetectable | HBsAg: (+) | Normal | Entecavir | 40 weeks | AST: 28 U/L, | Continued | Entecavir, since HBV/HDV reactivation under sunitinib | Negative HBV DNA after 40 weeks ofnivolumab | AST 28 U/L, ALT 19 U/L, after 40 weeks of nivolumab (under entecavir) | |
| 5 | Zhang, 2019 | 48 (M) | NPC | Camrelizumab | Undetectable | HBsAg (+) | Not defined | None | 3 weeks | HBV DNA: 7.81 × 103 | ALT: 191.4 U/L | Delayed | Entecavir | 1 week | 2 weeks |
| 6 | Zhang, 2019 | 47 (M) | NPC | Camrelizumab | Undetectable | HBsAg (+) | Not defined | None | 16 weeks | HBV DNA: 6.98 × 104 | ALT: 203.0 U/L | Delayed | Entecavir | 4 weeks | 4 weeks |
| 7 | Zhang, 2019 | 39 (M) | Melanoma | Camrelizumab | Undetectable | HBsAg (+) | Not defined | None | 28 weeks | HBV DNA: 2.10 × 103 | ALT: 27.6 U/L | Continued | None | 5 weeks | N/A |
| 8 | Zhang, 2019 | 36 (M) | HCC | Nivolumab | Undetectable | HBsAg (+) | Not defined | Entecavir | 12 weeks | HBV DNA: 1.80 × 103 | ALT: 298 U/L | Discontinued | Entecavir + TNF | 1 week | 3 weeks |
| 9 | Zhang, 2019 | 45 (M) | HNSCC | Toripalimab | Undetectable | HBsAg (+) | Not defined | None | 35 weeks | HBV DNA: 4.04 × 106 | ALT: 281.2 U/L | Delayed | Entecavir | 3 weeks | 6 weeks |
| 10 | Zhang, 2019 | 41 (F) | Soft tissue sarcoma | Nivolumab | Undetectable | HBsAg (+) | Not defined | None | 20 weeks | HBV DNA: 6.00 × 107 | ALT: 465.1 U/L | N/A | Entecavir | 8 weeks | 4 weeks |
| 1 | Kothapalli, 2018 | 54 (M) | Melanoma stage IV | Pembrolizumab | HCV RNA: (+) | Hepatitis panel work-up performed after ALT elevation | Normal | None | 8 weeks | Chronic HCV infection (HCV RNA (+)) | Grade II ALT rise | Continued | Ledipasvir 90 mg/sofosbuvir 400 mg | Not defined | 12 weeks |
| 2 | Davar, 2015 | 59 (F) | Melanoma stage IV | Pembrolizumab | HCV RNA: 2.290.867 IU/mL | Not defined | Mildly elevated AST/ALT | None | HCV RNA stable after 3 cycles of pembrolizumab | Stable | Continued | Ledipasvir 90 mg/sofosbuvir 400 mg (after 9 cycles of pembrolizumab) | 21 weeks (time of antiviral treatment) | 41 weeks from pembrolizumab and 18 weeks from antiviral treatment | |
| 3 | Davar, | 47 (M) | Melanoma stage IV | IFN followed by ipilimumab followed by IL-2 and dabrafenib/trametinib followed by pembrolizumab | HCV RNA: | Not defined | Normal | None | HCV RNA stable after 2 cycles of pembrolizumab | Stable | Discontinued due to PD | ART treatment (2 NRTIs+1 NNRTI) | – | – |
ALT, alanine aminotransferase; ART, antiretroviral therapy; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; HBsAg, hepatitis B surface antigen; HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HCV, hepatitis C virus; HCVr, HCV reactivation; HNSCC, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; ICPI, Immune checkpoint inhibitor; IFN, interferon; NNRTI, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; NPC, nasopharyngeal carcinoma; NRTIs, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; NSCLC, non-small-cell lung cancer; PD, progression of disease; RCC, renal cell carcinoma; RT, radiotherapy; RT-PCR, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; TDF, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; TTF-1, thyroid transcription factor 1.