| Literature DB >> 34434981 |
Rishi Rikhi1,2, Jaret Karnuta2, Muzna Hussain3, Patrick Collier2,3, Pauline Funchain2,4, Wai Hong Wilson Tang3, Timothy A Chan5, Rohit Moudgil2,3.
Abstract
The advent of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) has revolutionized the field of oncology, but these are associated with immune related adverse events. One such adverse event, is myocarditis, which has limited the continued immunosuppressive treatment options in patients afflicted by the disease. Pre-clinical and clinical data have found that specific ICI targets and precipitate distinct myocardial infiltrates, consistent with lymphocytic or giant cell myocarditis. Specifically, it has been reported that CTLA-4 inhibition preferentially results in giant cell myocarditis with a predominately CD4+ T cell infiltrate and PD-1 inhibition leads to lymphocytic myocarditis, with a predominately CD8+ T cell infiltrate. Our manuscript discusses the latest literature surrounding ICI pathways and targets, while detailing proposed mechanisms behind ICI mediated myocarditis.Entities:
Keywords: cardio-oncology; cardiovascular adverse event; immune checkpoint inhibitor; immune-related adverse event; myocarditis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34434981 PMCID: PMC8381278 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2021.721333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Figure 1ICI Cell Signaling Pathway and Targets. Solid arrow depicts how binding of tumor cell PD-L1 to PD-1 or B7 to CTLA-4 leads to down-regulation of T-cell activity. Dotted arrow depicts how blocking of T-cell anergy receptor ligands (B7 and PD-L1) results in T cell activation and tumor killing.
Immune checkpoint inhibitors and molecular targets.
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| Ipilimumab ( | CTLA-4 | GCM, CD4+ T cell infiltration |
| Pembrolizumab ( | PD-1 | LM, CD8+ T cell infiltration |
| Nivolumab ( | PD-1 | LM, CD8+ T cell infiltration |
| Cemiplimab ( | PD-1 | LM, CD8+ T cell infiltration |
| Atezolizumab ( | PD-L1 | LM, CD8+ T cell infiltration |
| Durvalumab ( | PD-L1 | LM, CD8+ T cell infiltration |
| Avelumab ( | PD-L1 | LM, CD8+ T cell infiltration |
| Tiragolumab ( | TIGIT | Not documented |
Figure 2Myocardial biopsy depicting lymphocytic myocarditis in a patient who received both nivolumab and ipilimumab. (A, B) Immunostaining is predominantly CD8+, (C) with CD4+ staining and (D) hematoxylin and eosin staining.
Select studies highlighting use of various immunosuppression strategies in myocarditis.
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| The Myocarditis Treatment Trial ( | 111 | Histopathological diagnosis and Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction (LVEF) <0.45 | Prednisone with cyclosporine or azathioprine | Change in LVEF 28 weeks | No statistical difference in EF or survival |
| GCM Treatment Trial ( | 12 | Biopsy-proven GCM with <3 months of symptoms | Steroids and cyclosporine +/– muromonab-CD3 | EMB and LVEF in 4 weeks | Statistically significant decrease in inflammatory cells and no statistical difference in EF |
| Rabbit anti-thymocyte globulin (RATG) at Harefield Hospital ( | 6 | Histopathological diagnosis | RATG + methylprednisolone | Mean LVEF improvement | Mean LVEF improvement 29% |
| Intervention in Myocarditis and Acute Cardiomyopathy (IMAC) trial ( | 62 | Histopathological diagnosis (cellular inflammation not necessary, GCM excluded), LVEF <0.4, <6 months of symptoms without CAD or valvular disease | IVIG | LVEF change at 6 and 12 months | No statistical difference in change in EF compared to placebo |