| Literature DB >> 34544895 |
Leyre Zubiri1, Gabriel E Molina1, Alexandra-Chloé Villani2, Kerry L Reynolds3, Meghan J Mooradian1, Justine Cohen4, Sienna M Durbin1, Laura Petrillo5, Genevieve M Boland6, Dejan Juric1, Michael Dougan7, Molly F Thomas8, Alex T Faje9, Michelle Rengarajan10, Amanda C Guidon11, Steven T Chen12, Daniel Okin13, Benjamin D Medoff13, Mazen Nasrallah14, Minna J Kohler14, Sara R Schoenfeld14, Rebecca S Karp-Leaf1, Meghan E Sise15, Tomas G Neilan16, Daniel A Zlotoff16, Jocelyn R Farmer17, Aditya Bardia1, Ryan J Sullivan1, Steven M Blum1, Yevgeniy R Semenov12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In 2017, Massachusetts General Hospital implemented the Severe Immunotherapy Complications (SIC) Service, a multidisciplinary care team for patients hospitalized with immune-related adverse events (irAEs), a unique spectrum of toxicities associated with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). This study's objectives were to evaluate the intervention's (1) effect on patient outcomes and healthcare utilization, and (2) ability to collect biological samples via a central infrastructure, in order to study the mechanisms responsible for irAEs.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; combination; cytotoxicity; drug therapy; immunologic; immunotherapy; inflammation; tumor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34544895 PMCID: PMC8454442 DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2021-002886
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Figure 1Patient identification for Severe Immunotherapy Complications (SIC) Service. ICI, immune checkpoint inhibitor; irAE, immune-related adverse event; MD, Doctor of Medicine; MGH, Massachusetts General Hospital.
Figure 2Standard operation procedure for sample collection and processing. CTLA-4, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen-4; PBMCs, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; PD-1, programmed death-1; PD-L1, programmed death-ligand 1.
Characteristics of patients admitted for irAE before and after SIC Service implementation
| Characteristic | Pre-SIC* | Post-SIC† | P value‡ |
| (n=127 patients) | (n=122 patients) | ||
| Age, mean (SD), years | 62.6 (13.9) | 64.6 (11.1) | 0.216 |
| Female sex | 44 (34.7%) | 55 (45.1%) | 0.093 |
| Cancer type | |||
| Melanoma | 48 (37.8%) | 31 (25.4%) | 0.156 |
| Thoracic | 35 (27.6%) | 38 (31.2%) | |
| Gastrointestinal | 14 (11.0%) | 26. (21.3%) | |
| Genitourinary | 8 (6.3%) | 9 (7.4%) | |
| Hematologic | 3 (2.4%) | 7 (5.7%) | |
| Gynecologic | 5 (3.9%) | 3 (2.5%) | |
| Head and neck | 5 (3.9%) | 2 (1.6%) | |
| Neurologic | 3 (2.4%) | 4 (3.3%) | |
| Breast | 5 (3.9%) | 2 (1.6%) | |
| Sarcoma | 1 (0.8%) | 0 | |
| ICI type | |||
| CTLA-4 | 9 (7.1%) | 3 (2.5%) | 0.147 |
| PD-1 | 84 (66.1%) | 92 (75.4%) | |
| PD-L1 | 8 (6.3%) | 10 (8.2%) | |
| CTLA-4+PD-1 | 26 (20.5%) | 17 (13.9%) | |
| irAE type | |||
| Allergy | 3 (2.4%) | 1 (0.8%) | 0.311 |
| Cardiac | 9 (7.1%) | 11 (9.0%) | |
| Dermatologic | 9 (7.1%) | 3 (2.5%) | |
| Endocrine | 15 (11.8%) | 13 (10.7%) | |
| Gastrointestinal | 28 (22.1%) | 20 (16.4%) | |
| Hepatic | 20 (15.8%) | 23 (18.9%) | |
| Hematologic | 4 (3.2%) | 2 (1.6%) | |
| Neurologic | 10 (7.9%) | 14 (11.5%) | |
| Pulmonary | 26 (20.5%) | 26 (21.3%) | |
| Renal | 1 (0.8%) | 7 (5.7%) | |
| Rheumatologic | 2 (1.6%) | 2 (1.6%) |
*Data are presented as number (percentage) of patients, unless otherwise indicated; pre-SIC date range is April 2, 2016–October 2, 2017.
†Data are presented as number (percentage) of patients, unless otherwise indicated; post-SIC date range is October 3, 2017–October 24, 2018.
‡Unpaired t-test for continuous data; Pearson χ2 test for categorical data.
CTLA-4, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen-4; ICI, immune checkpoint inhibitor; irAE, immune-related adverse event; PD-1, programmed death-1; PD-L1, programmed death-ligand 1; SIC, Severe Immunotherapy Complications.
Impact of SIC Service implementation on key outcomes—logistic regressions
| Outcome | Pre-SIC* | Post-SIC† | Coefficient/OR (95% CI)‡ | P value |
| (n=166 admits) | (n=149 admits) | |||
| Length of stay, median (IQR), days | 5.5 (3–11) | 5 (3–9) | −1.7 (−3.56 to 0.19)§ | 0.078 |
| Discharged on corticosteroids¶ | 121 (75.6%) | 96 (69.1%) | 0.60 (0.33 to 1.10)** | 0.101 |
| Use of non-steroidal immunosuppression | 24 (14.5%) | 18 (12.1%) | 0.87 (0.43 to 1.77)** | 0.702 |
| ICI discontinuation for irAE†† | 74 (66.1%) | 61 (67.0%) | 1.04 (0.55 to 1.98)** | 0.897 |
| Died during irAE admission | 11 (6.6%) | 13 (8.7%) | 1.46 (0.60 to 3.55)** | 0.398 |
| IrAE readmission | 43 (25.9) | 22 (14.8) | 0.46 (0.22 to 0.95)‡‡ |
|
| Length of stay of irAE readmission, median (IQR), days | 7 (3–16) | 6 (3–10) | −8.08 (−16.03 to 0.14)§ |
|
Bold values are statistically significant,
*Data are presented as number (percentage) of admissions, unless otherwise indicated; pre-SIC date range is April 2, 2016–October 2, 2017.
†Data are presented as number (percentage) of admissions, unless otherwise indicated; post-SIC date range is October 3, 2017–October 24, 2018.
‡Data are presented as coefficient (95% CI) for linear regressions (continuous variables) and OR (95% CI) for logistic regressions (categorical variables).
§Multivariable linear regression with covariates: age, sex, irAE confirmation status, malignancy, ICI class and primary toxicity type.
¶Excludes patients with thyroid toxicities or diabetes mellitus (given steroids are not indicated) as the irAE. Pre-SIC n=160; post-SIC n=139.
**Multivariable logistic regression with covariates: age, sex, irAE confirmation status, malignancy, ICI class, primary toxicity type and presence of multiple toxicities.
††Excludes patients with endocrine toxicities (given ICI discontinuation is not indicated) as well as patients who previously discontinued ICI prior to admission or discontinued ICI for any non-irAE reason (disease progression). Pre-SIC n=112; post-SIC n=91.
‡‡Multivariable logistic regression with covariates: age, sex, irAE confirmation status, malignancy, ICI class, primary toxicity type, presence of multiple toxicities and ICI discontinuation for toxicity.
ICI, immune checkpoint inhibitor; irAE, immune-related adverse event; SIC, Severe Immunotherapy Complications.
Figure 3Number of patient samples (blood, bodily fluids, tissues) collected. *Other=one case of hematological toxicity and one case of pancreatitis. BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid.
Figure 4Serial blood and tissue samples in an irAE patient with multiple toxicities. irAE, immune-related adverse event.