| Literature DB >> 33288791 |
Cristian Virgil Lungulescu1, Bogdan Silviu Ungureanu2, Adina Turcu-Stiolica3, Valentina Ghimpau4, Stefan Alexandru Artene5, Irina Mihaela Cazacu6, Alexandru Florian Grecu7, Venera Cristina Dinescu8, Adina Croitoru6, Simona Ruxandra Volovat9.
Abstract
Recombinant monoclonal antibodies are used for treating various diseases, from asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, and inflammatory bowel disease to cancer. Although monoclonal antibodies are known to have fewer toxic reactions compared with the conventional cytotoxic antineoplastic drugs, the cases of severe systemic hypersensitivity reaction (HSR) should be acknowledged. Our aim was to assess the diagnostic accuracy of the anti-IgE for galactose-α-1,3-galactose in patients with HSRs to cetuximab. We searched in PubMed, Cochrane Library, Scopus, and World of Science databases to July 1st, 2020. We included a total of 6 studies, with 1074 patients. Meta-analysis was performed using bivariate analysis and the random-effect model. The pooled sensitivity was 73% (95% CI 62-81%) and the pooled specificity was 88% (95% CI 79-94%). We had not found significant heterogeneity and, despite some discrepancies in the nature of data available in the analysed studies, we draw the conclusion that the presence of cetuximab specific IgE (anti cetuximab antibody) and/or galactose-α-1,3-galactose shows moderate to high sensitivity and specificity of developing an HSR. More studies are needed to establish a protocol necessary for the proper prediction and avoidance of HSR related to cetuximab.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33288791 PMCID: PMC7721698 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-78497-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Characteristics of the 6 included studies.
| References | Study population | Study design | Site of malignancy | Cetuximab HSR | Correlation between IGE and HSR | Summary of findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chung[ | n = 538 | Retrospective analysis of cetuximab induced HSR and IgE specific for alpha-gal. Four groups of patients: group 1:76 patients who received treatment with cetuximab. Group 2,3,4 consisted of 462 patients: 72 healthy volunteers, 49 with history of head and neck cancer, 341 female control subjects. Method: ImmunoCAP | Colorectal cancer Head and neck Lung | 26 HSR rated by the investigators: 13 low-grade, 12 high grade, 1 late response | Out of the 25 patients that had HSR, 17 had a positive test for IgE antibodies; 1 of the 51 subjects who did not have a hypersensitivity reaction had such antibodies before treatment with cetuximab | Specific antibodies for galactose-α-1,3-galactose were present in serum in most patients who had HSR to cetuximab |
| Dupont[ | n = 229 (108 assessed for IgE antibody) | Retrospective study of a cohort of patients treated with cetuximab. Method: ELISA | Colorectal Head and neck Other | 6 grade 1 reactions, 7 grade 2, 9 grade 3, 2 grade 4–5 reactions | The assay was positive in 13 out of 17 patients with HSR and in 17 out of 91 without HSR | Assessing the specific IgE values could be a valuable test to identify the high risk patients for developing HSR, but it needs further confirmation in prospective trials |
| Dupont[ | n = 247 | Multicenter, prospective cohort study. Method: ELISA | Head and neck Colorectal | 12 patients experienced a HSR, of which 8 patients had a severe reaction (5 grade 3, and 3 grade 4 reaction) | 33 patients out of 239 who did not experience severe HSR had high specific IgE values. 5 patients out of 8 who experienced severe HSR had high specific IgE values | Detection of pretreatment specific IgE is helpful in identifying patients with high risk of developing cetuximab-induced HSR |
| Iwamoto[ | n = 12 | History of cetuximab- induced HR within the past 3 months or initiation of cetuximab therapy within the next week. Method: ELISA | Head and neck cancer | 2 patients with a grade 1 reactions; 2 with grade 3 reaction | 6 patients were tested positive for IgE specific out of which 4 developed HSR. 6 patients were negative for IgE specific, none with HSR | The study concludes that evaluating drug-IgE Interaction it is an inviting method to identify high-risk patients for HSR |
| Maier[ | n = 545 | Retrospective case–control analysis of serum or plasma samples. Samples were obtained before administration of cetuximab. Method: ImmunoCAP | Colorectal Head and neck Ovarian cancer Pancreatic cancer NSCLC | 21 patients developed SIR | Out of the 21 patients who experienced HSR 15 were IgE positive and 6 IgE negative. Out of the 524 without HSR 23 were IgE positive and 501 IgE negative | The study concludes that is unclear whether the plain presence of specific IgE predicts the risk to suffer a severe HSR upon administration or if a certain threshold is required |
| Mariotte[ | n = 92 | Retrospective study. Patients treated with cetuximab at François Baclesse Centre, Caen, France for which pre-treatment samples were available. Method: ELISA | Head and neck Colorectal Other | 14 had HSR after first cetuximab administration. 6 had low to moderate reaction (grade 1–2). 6 had severe reactions (grade 3). 2 died following the HSR event (grade 4) | Anti-cetuximab IgE were considered positive in 14 out of 72 patients without HSR and in 10 out of 14 with HSR. In the 14 patients with HSR reaction, anti-cetuximab IgE levels reached a median level more than ten times bigger than in those without reaction | Pre-existing anti-cetuximab IgEs correlates with high risk for developing HSR at drug administration. The ELISA test presented in this study can predict a higher risk for developing HSR but not a reaction. There is no correlation between the levels of IgE and the severity of the reaction |
Figure 1The flowchart of the studies included in this meta-analysis.
Figure 2Risk of bias and applicability concerns summary.
Figure 3Forest plot and SROC curve.