| Literature DB >> 34424399 |
Umberto Pensato1, Giulia Amore1, Roberto D'Angelo2, Rita Rinaldi2, Marianna Nicodemo2, Francesca Rondelli2, Susanna Mondini2, Rossella Santoro2, Susanna Sammali1, Andrea Farolfi3, Luca Spinardi4, Luca Faccioli4, Beatrice Casadei5,6, Michele Dicataldo5, Francesca Bonifazi5, Pierluigi Zinzani5,6, Pietro Cortelli1,2, Andrea Stracciari2, Maria Guarino7.
Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy is an emerging highly effective treatment for refractory haematological malignancies. Unfortunately, its therapeutic benefit may be hampered by treatment-related toxicities, including neurotoxicity. Early aggressive treatment is paramount to prevent neurological sequelae, yet it potentially interferes with the anti-cancer action of CAR T-cells. We describe four CAR T-cells infused patients who presented with reiterative writing behaviours, namely paligraphia, as an early manifestation of neurotoxicity, and eventually developed frontal predominant encephalopathy (one mild, three severe). Paligraphia may represent an early, specific, and easily detectable clinical finding of CAR T-cell therapy-related neurotoxicity, potentially informing its management.Entities:
Keywords: Anakinra; B-cell lymphoma; CAR-T therapy; Cytokine release syndrome (CRS); Cytokine storm-associated encephalopathy (CySE); Immune effectors cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34424399 PMCID: PMC8381707 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-021-10766-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 6.682
Demographics and disease course
| Pt | Age (y), Sex | CRS start/enda (max grade) | ICANS start/enda (max grade) | ICANS neurological manifestationsa | Investigative findingsa (EEG, MRI, 18F-PET) | Treatment | Follow-upa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 65, F | + 0, + 10 (grade 4) | + 0, + 10 (grade 5) | Paligraphia (+ 0), confusion, ideo-motor apraxia, echolalia, frontal release signs, coma (+5) | EEG: diffuse slowing at 4-5 Hz, left frontal discharges (+ 1) -Brain MRI: multiple white matter hyperintensity (+ 8) | -Dexamethasone (+ 1), -High-dose intravenous methylprednisolone (+ 4), -Anakinra (+ 4) | Death related to CAR T-cell therapy toxicity and sepsis (+ 10) |
| 2 | 65, F | + 0, + 59 (grade 4) | + 0, + 51 (grade 4) | Paligraphia (+ 0), perseveration, difficulties in Luria’s test, frontal release signs, fluency slowing, postural myoclonic tremor, severe encephalopathy (+ 7) | EEG: diffuse slowing at 5 Hz (+ 2) -Brain MRI: normal (+ 5) -Brain FDG-PET: diffuse bilateral hypometabolism with frontal predominance (+ 39) | -High-dose intravenous methylprednisolone (+ 7), -Siltuximab (+ 7), -Anakinra (+ 14) | Mild dysexecutive signs (+ 59) Death related to cancer relapse (+ 180) |
| 3 | 68, F | + 0, + 7 (grade 3) | + 2, + 20 (grade 3) | Paligraphia (+ 2), ideo-motor slowing, postural myoclonic tremor, aphasia, frontal release signs, perseveration, dyscalculia | EEG: diffuse slowing at 6 Hz with isolated posterior discharges (+ 3) -Brain MRI: normal (+ 9) -Brain FDG-PET: diffuse hypometabolism with posterior sparing (+ 9) | -Dexamethasone (+ 3), -High-dose intravenous methylprednisolone (+ 5) | Complete neurological recovery (+ 30) |
| 4 | 68, M | + 0, + 7 (grade 1) | + 3, + 12 (grade 2) | Paligraphia (+ 4), ideo-motor slowing, aphasia nominum, fluency slowing, frontal release signs, postural myoclonic tremor | EEG: diffuse slowing at 6 Hz (+ 4) Brain MRI: normal (+ 6) Brain FDG-PET: diffuse hypometabolism with posterior sparing (+ 6) | -Dexamethasone (+ 3) | Complete neurological recovery (+ 30) |
aWe refer to CAR T-cells infusion as day “0”, and to all events occurred subsequently as “plus day”
Immunotherapies were administered at the following regimens: intravenous dexamethasone (10 mg q6-8 h), high-dose intravenous methylprednisolone (1000 mg daily for 5 days), intravenous siltuximab (11 mg/kg), and subcutaneous anakinra (100 mg q12h for 7 days)
CRS cytokine release syndrome. ICANS immune effector-associated neurotoxicity syndrome. EEG electroencephalography. MRI magnetic resonance imaging. CT computed tomography. FDG-PET [18F]FDG positron emission tomography
Fig. 1Disease course in case 1. Neurological manifestations, ICANS severity, CRS severity, serum IL-6 and ferritin levels, timing of treatments and diagnostic investigations during disease course. ICANS and CRS severity were graded according to the consensus by Lee et al. [2] ICE score modified during disease course as follows: day0 = 10; day1 = 3 day2 = 7; day3 = 4; day5 till death = 0. ICANS immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome. CRS cytokine release syndrome. ICE score immune effector cell-associated encephalopathy score
Fig. 2Writing findings in ICANS patients. Within the black box, the faithful drafting of the Italian sentence written by the patients is reported, followed by the same Italian sentence reported with no letter repetitions and then its English translation. Rewriting of letters produced by patient 1 at ICANS onset (A) and by patient 3 at ICANS onset (B) and after complete clinical resolution (C). ICANS immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome
Fig. 3Brain MRI findings in case 1. Axial 1.5 Tesla brain MRI. Unremarkable baseline brain MRI (A, D, G). Left parietal periventricular T2-weighted hyperintensity (white arrows) with radiological features initially consistent with vasogenic oedema [↑DWI (E); ↑/ = ADC (H)], and then with cytotoxic oedema [↑DWI (F); ↓ADC (I)]. FLAIR fluid-attenuated inversion recovery; DWI diffusion-weighted image; ADC apparent diffusion coefficient
Fig. 4Brain FDG-PET findings in case 2. Matched axial brain FDG-PET (A,B,C) and CT scan (D,E,F) showing diffuse bilateral hypometabolism with frontal predominance. Additionally, a focal area of severe hypometabolism (A, B), resulting from a spontaneous parenchymal haematoma associated with subarachnoid haemorrhage (D, E), is observable in the left parietal lobe. FDG-PET [18F]FDG positron emission tomography. CT computed tomography