| Literature DB >> 35693455 |
Chimaobi M Anugwom1,2, Thomas M Leventhal2, Jose D Debes2,3.
Abstract
Treatment modalities for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) vary from surgical techniques and interventional radiologic strategies to systemic therapy. For the latter, the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) has gained popularity due to successful trials showing increased survival. In patients who have undergone liver transplantation, recurrence of HCC poses a significant challenge. There is indeed considerable debate on the efficacy and safety of ICI use in liver transplant recipients due to competing immune interests in maintaining a healthy graft and combating the tumor. Recent reports and case series have highlighted a role for the type of immune therapy, timing of therapy, tissue expression of PD-1 and modulation of immunosuppression, in the understanding of the efficacy and risks of ICIs for HCC in liver transplant. In this article, we appraise the available literature on the usage of ICIs for HCC in liver transplant recipients and provide perspectives on immune concerns as well as potential recommendations to consider during the management of such complex cases.Entities:
Keywords: Hepatocellular carcinoma; checkpoint inhibitors; liver transplant
Year: 2022 PMID: 35693455 PMCID: PMC9181209 DOI: 10.20517/2394-5079.2021.123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatoma Res ISSN: 2394-5079
Figure 1.Interplay between immune checkpoint inhibitors and liver transplant immunosuppression in a recipient with hepatocellular carcinoma, emphasizing the effect of these medications on components of the immune system. NK: Natural killer; IL: interleukin.
Immune checkpoint inhibitors in the systemic therapy of hepatocellular carcinoma
| Trial | Therapy class | Study therapy | Comparison | Population | Endpoint |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KEYNOTE-240[ | PD1 | Pembrolizumab | Placebo | Second line systemic therapy | OS, PFS |
| CheckMate 459[ | PD1 | Nivolumab | Sorafenib | First systemic therapy | OS, ORR, PFS |
| IMbrave 150[ | PDL1/Anti-VEGF | Atezolizumab + Bevacizumab | Sorafenib | First systemic therapy | OS, PFS |
| ORIENT-32[ | PDL1/Anti-VEGF | Sintilimab + IBI305 | Sorafenib | First systemic therapy | OS, ORR |
| CHECKMATE-9DW ( | PD1/CTLA4 | Nivolumab + Ipilimumab | Sorafenib or Lenvatinib | First systemic therapy | OS |
| COSMIC-312 ( | PDL1/TKI | Atezolizumab + Cabozantinib | Cabozantinib | First systemic therapy | PFS, OS |
| LEAP-002 ( | PD1/TKI | Pembrolizumab + Lenvatinib | Lenvatinib + Placebo | First systemic therapy | PFS, OS |
| RATIONALE-301 ( | PD1 | Tislelizumab | Sorafenib | First systemic therapy | OS |
| HIMALAYA ( | PDL1/CTLA4 | Durvalumab + Tremelimumab | Durvalumab | First systemic therapy | OS |
| PHOCUS ( | VACCINE/TKI | Pexa-Vec (modified vaccine virus) + Sorafenib | Sorafenib | First systemic therapy | OS |
| KEYNOTE-937 ( | PD1 | Pembrolizumab | Placebo | Radiological response following ablation or resection | OS, RFS |
| CHECKMATE-9DX ( | PD1 | Nivolumab | Placebo | High recurrence risk following surgical resection or ablation | RFS |
| EMERALD-2 ( | PDL1/Anti-VEGF | Durvalumab + Bevacizumab | Durvalumab + placebo | High recurrence risk following surgical resection or ablation | RFS |
| IMBRAVE-050 ( | PDL1/Anti-VEGF | Atezolizumab + Bevacizumab | Active surveillance | High recurrence risk following surgical resection or ablation | RFS |
| EMERALD-1 ( | PDL1/Anti-VEGF | TACE + Durvalumab + Bevacizumab | TACE + Durvalumab + placebo | First TACE | PFS |
| CHECKMATE-74W ( | PD1/CTLA4 | TACE + Nivolumab + Ipilimumab | TACE + Nivolumab + placebo | First TACE | TTTP, OS |
| LEAP-012 ( | PD1/CTLA4 | TACE + Pembrolizumab + Lenvatinib | TACE + placebo + placebo | First TACE | PFS, OS |
| TACE-3 ( | PD1 | Drug-eluting bead TACE + Nivolumab | Drug-eluting bead TACE | First TACE | OS |
Efficacy and adverse events noted with immune checkpoint inhibitors in the liver transplant recipient
| Study | Study type | Number of patients | Type of ICI | Sot type | Major adverse findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biondani | Case report (Letter to the editor) | 1 | Nivolumab | Liver transplant | Patient had no adverse effects; suggesting that pre-emptive corticosteroids and the combination of tacrolimus and everolimus may have prevented hepatic immune-related adverse events |
| De Toni | Case report (Letter to the editor) | 1 | Nivolumab | Liver transplant | No adverse effects were seen suggesting that treatment with checkpoint inhibitors under close surveillance of liver function might be feasible in select transplant recipients |
| Anugwom | Case report | 1 | Nivolumab | Liver transplant | Patient developed cholestatic disease in the allograft, with fatal confluent hepatic necrosis, consequent synthetic dysfunction, severe esophagitis and gastrointestinal hemorrhage |
| Owoyemi | Retrospective study | 17 | Nivolumab (53%), Pembrolizumab (24%), Cemiplimab (12%), Atezolizumab (6%) | Mixed SOT (7 KT, 8 LT, 2 OHT) | 25% (2) of LT recipients suffered ACR |
| Abdel-Wahab | Retrospective study | 39 | Pembrolizumab (44%), Nivolumab (36%) | Mixed SOT 23 KT, 11 LT, 5 OHT | ACR seen in 49% KT recipients, 20% OHT recipients and 36% LT recipients |
| Gassmann | Case report | 1 | Nivolumab | Liver transplant | Severe cellular graft rejection, consequent decline in liver function and severe coagulopathy and fatal intracranial hemorrhage. |
| Kumar | Case series | 2 | Pembrolizumab | Kidney transplant | Both patients developed acute cellular rejection, but grafts were salvaged |
| Tsung | Retrospective study | 7 | Cemiplimab (86%), Pembrolizumab (14%) | Mixed SOT (4 KT, 2 LT, 1 lung transplant) | 1 (100%) lung transplant recipient developed steroid-responsive pneumonitis |
Combination ipilimumab and nivolumab 3%. ICI: Immune checkpoint inhibitor; SOT: solid organ transplant; KT: kidney transplant; LT: liver transplant; OHT: orthotopic heart transplant; ACR: acute cellular rejection; IRAEs: immune-related adverse effects; CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; mTOR: mechanistic target of rapamycin.