| Literature DB >> 34939017 |
Harish Seethapathy1, Sandra M Herrmann2, Meghan E Sise1.
Abstract
Immune checkpoint inhibitors are now approved for more than 50 indications, and increasing numbers of patients with advanced cancer are receiving immunotherapy. Immune-related adverse events that result from checkpoint inhibitors can affect any organ system. The most common kidney side effect is acute kidney injury, typically caused by acute interstitial nephritis. This review covers the most recent advances in immune checkpoint inhibitor-induced acute kidney injury. The review focuses on the differences between checkpoint inhibitor classes in causing acute kidney injury and differentiating immune checkpoint inhibitor-induced kidney damage from other causes of acute kidney injury. We describe the appropriate use of a kidney biopsy in the diagnosis of acute kidney injury and highlight the need for identification of noninvasive diagnostic and predictive biomarkers of immune checkpoint inhibitor-induced acute kidney injury. In the treatment section, approaches to corticosteroid use and the risks and benefits of rechallenging patients who experience acute kidney injury are debated. We also clarify the long-term adverse effects of immune checkpoint inhibitors on kidney function and the risk of chronic kidney disease in cancer survivors.Entities:
Keywords: Immune checkpoint inhibitor; acute interstitial nephritis; acute kidney injury; chronic kidney disease; nephrotoxicity; renal failure
Year: 2021 PMID: 34939017 PMCID: PMC8664750 DOI: 10.1016/j.xkme.2021.08.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Med ISSN: 2590-0595
Figure 1Breakdown of acute kidney injury (AKI) etiologies in single-center cohort studies of patients receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). The etiology of AKI was adjudicated by 2 nephrologists through a manual review of the electronic medical record, with a third available for disagreement.10, 11, 12,16, 17, 18 Abbreviation: ATN, acute tubular necrosis.
Comparison of Guidelines Based Recommendations for Management of ICI-Induced AKI
| Management | NCCN | SITC | ASCO |
|---|---|---|---|
| Immunotherapy | G1 & G2: Hold; G3 & G4: Permanently discontinue | G1 & G2: Hold; G3 & G4: Permanently discontinue | G1 & G2: Hold; G3 & G4: Permanently discontinue |
| Kidney Biopsy | Consider for G3 | No recommendation | Consider kidney biopsy if alternative causes cannot be ruled out |
| Corticosteroid Taper | G1: None; G2: 0.5-1 mg/kg/day; G3/G4: 1-2 mg/kg/day; Taper over 4-6 weeks once Cr <=G1; Monitor Cr weekly | Dose/schedule to be individualized and based on grade | G1: None; G2: 0.5-1 mg/kg/day; G3/G4 or no improvement or worsening in G2: 1-2 mg/kg/day; Taper over 4-6 weeks once Cr <=G1; Monitor Cr weekly |
| Other immunosuppression | Add immunosuppression (cyclophosphamide, mycophenolate, azathioprine, infliximab) if Cr> G2 after 1 week | No recommendation | Add immunosuppression(e.g. Mycophenolate) of worsening or no improvement in: 7 days (G2)/3-5 days (G3)/2-3 days (G4) |
Note: Recommendations by major societies or expert working groups on the management of checkpoint inhibitor related acute kidney injury.,, Grading of renal immune-related adverse event is based on CTCAE (Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events) v5.0 criteria and is defined by elevation of creatinine above baseline. Mild (G1): 1.5-2× baseline Cr or 0.3 mg/dL elevation above baseline; Moderate (G2): 2-3× baseline Cr; Severe (G3): >3× baseline Cr; Life-threatening (G4): >6× baseline Cr or dialysis indicated.
Abbreviations: ASCO, American Society of Clinical Oncology; Cr, creatinine; NCCN, National Comprehensive Cancer Network; SITC, Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer.
Figure 2Percentage of steroid-treated patients with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI)-induced acute interstitial nephritis (AIN) that achieved full or partial remission. Studies with ≥10 patients with ICI-AIN treated with steroids were included. The typical steroid courses used in these studies include a starting dose of 40-100 mg/day (0.5-1 mg/kg/day) tapered over 4-12 weeks.,,,,
| Favors Performing Kidney Biopsy to Conclusively Diagnose Etiology of ICI-Induced AKI | Favors Empiric Treatment of Presumed ICI-Induced AIN |
|---|---|
Grade 2 or 3 AKI Lack of other concurrent immune-related adverse event at the time of AKI and no concomitant AIN-associated medications (PPI, NSAIDS, antibiotics) Other potential etiologies that are equally likely and cannot be ruled out with history or laboratory testing along Concurrently receiving other nephrotoxic antineoplastic therapies Presence of proteinuria >1 g/day Serologic abnormalities (such as positive ANCA, hypocomplementemia) Low risk for biopsy procedure (BMI <30 kg/m2, no prior episodes of significant bleeding, no current coagulopathy, well controlled hypertension, not on antiplatelets or anticoagulants) | Concurrently experiencing other nonrenal immune-related adverse events Concurrently taking other AIN-associated medications (PPI, NSAIDS, antibiotics) One or more risk factors for bleeding complications (BMI >30 kg/m2, prior intracranial or transfusion-requiring bleeding, uncontrolled hypertension with SBP >160 mm Hg despite antihypertensives, on antiplatelets or anticoagulants, patient with altered mental status, mechanical ventilation) Solitary functioning kidney or multiple cysts in the kidney Urgent need to treat with empiric steroids (AKI-requiring RRT) when kidney biopsy is not immediately feasible. |
| Factors Favoring Quick Steroid Taper and ICI Rechallenge | Factors Favoring Longer Steroid Course and Avoiding ICI Rechallenge |
|---|---|
No other severe immune-related adverse events (myocarditis, myositis, pneumonitis, hepatitis, neurologic immune-related adverse events) AKI that recovers quickly with corticosteroids (begins improving in <1 week) Other AIN-associated medications that can be discontinued (PPI, NSAIDs, antibiotics, etc.) Biopsy or clinical features of AIN (as opposed to other immune-mediated glomerular diseases) Newly starting therapy (patient has likely not yet derived possible anticancer benefit) Melanoma and other ICI-sensitive tumors ICI used has a short half-life | AKI slowly recovering with <25% change in creatinine by 5-7 days Evidence of ICI-associated glomerular disease on biopsy or nephrotic-range proteinuria No concomitant AIN triggering medications Other life-threatening immune-related adverse events (myocarditis, myositis, pneumonitis, hepatitis, or neurologic) Cancers that are not particularly sensitive to ICIs Longer duration on therapy and stable cancer (suggesting that whatever benefits are to be gained have already been realized and cancer is likely to be stable off ICIs) |