| Literature DB >> 36016624 |
Jian Wang1,2, Xiaoyue Xiao3, Xiaorong Dong1,2, Gang Wu1,2, Xinghua Wang4, Ruiguang Zhang1,2.
Abstract
Anti-PD-1/PD-L1 immunotherapy reactivates T-cell activity to boost the antitumor effect and may trigger autoimmune toxicity in various organ systems involving eyeball and periocular structures at the same time. The rarity of ocular immune-related adverse events should not prevent us from paying attention to this issue because of the bad consequences of visual impairment. This is the first case report of anti-PD-1 sintilimab-induced bilateral optic neuropathy in a 76-year-old man with squamous non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The patient presented with sudden vision blurring without pain in both eyes after three therapeutic cycles of sintilimab plus chemotherapy. Based on the ophthalmic examination, laboratory, and radiological results, our patient was diagnosed with optic neuropathy complication secondary to anti-PD-1 sintilimab treatment. Consequently, sintilimab was held and systemic steroids were administered. The follow-up review showed that the vision recovered and the size of the primary tumor continued to decrease with the response assessment as the partial response. In conclusion, this case report suggested that patients with NSCLC undergoing anti-PD-1/PD-L1 therapy should be closely monitored for ophthalmic assessment and alert to the occurrence of sintilimab-induced optic neuropathy.Entities:
Keywords: PD-1; immune-related adverse events; non-small cell lung cancer; optic neuropathy; sintilimab
Year: 2022 PMID: 36016624 PMCID: PMC9396260 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.931074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 5.738
Figure 1PET-CT scan of the patient at baseline and an outlined timeline of his treatment and adverse events. (A, B) Representative images of PET-CT scan of the patient at baseline on 5 May 2021. (C) The schematic timeline for the patient, from diagnosis to resolution of optic neuropathy (not to scale).
Figure 2The ophthalmic examination of the patients with bilateral optic neuropathy after three cycles of sintilimab-containing therapy (A) Fundus photography displayed obvious optic disc edema in both eyes with macular edema in his right eye and parapapillary linear hemorrhage in his left eye after the third cycle of sintilimab plus chemotherapy on 12 August 2021. OD, oculus dexter; OS, oculus sinister. (B) Measurements of the thickness of retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) by optical coherence tomography (OCT) on 5 August 2021. (C) Macular OCT showed subretinal fluid in the right eye on 5 August 2021. (D) Visual evoked potential (VEP) was measured on 6 August 2021 and showed prolonged P100 latency and decreased P100 amplitude at 60 and 15 arcmin in both eyes. (E) Fundus fluorescein angiography (FFA) indicated optic disc fluorescence leakage at the late stage and low fluorescence perfusion at the early stage in both eyes on 12 August 2021.
Figure 3The ophthalmic examination of the patients post steroids against sintilimab-induced optic neuropathy and representative CT images in the follow-up (A) Fundus photography post steroids against optic neuropathy secondary to sintilimab therapy on 28 September 2021. (B) OCT examination of the optic disc post steroids against sintilimab-induced optic neuropathy on 28 September 2021. (C) Representative CT images and (D) the estimated tumor volume during the treatment of the case in the follow-up from 1 May 2021, to 3 December 2021. The horizontal axis represents changes in tumor volume. The vertical axis depicted the time of CT scan and the estimated tumor longitudinal diameter (X) and the greatest transverse diameter (Y) in the axial plane and the maximum thickness in head-to-foot direction (Z). The tumor volume was calculated by using the formula (X*Y*Z)/2.