| Literature DB >> 36078923 |
Florence Chaudot1, Pascal Sève1,2, Antoine Rousseau3, Alexandre Thibault Jacques Maria4, Pierre Fournie5, Pierre Lozach6, Jeremy Keraen7, Marion Servant8, Romain Muller9, Baptiste Gramont10, Sara Touhami11, Habeeb Mahmoud12, Pierre-Antoine Quintart8, Stéphane Dalle13, Olivier Lambotte14,15, Laurent Kodjikian16, Yvan Jamilloux1,17.
Abstract
Ocular immunotherapy-related adverse events (IRAEs), although rare, can be sight-threatening. Our objective was to analyze ocular IRAEs diagnosed in France from the marketing of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICPIs) until June 2021 and to review the literature. We collected the cases of 28 patients (36 ocular IRAEs), occurring after an average of 17 weeks (±19). Forty-six percent of patients were treated for metastatic melanoma. Anti-PD1 agents were responsible for 57% of the IRAEs. Anterior uveitis was the most common (44%), followed by panuveitis (28%). Of 25 uveitis cases, 80% were bilateral and 60% were granulomatous. We found one case with complete Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada syndrome and one case of birdshot retinochoroidopathy. The other IRAEs were eight ocular surface disorders, one optic neuropathy, and one inflammatory orbitopathy. Seventy percent of the IRAEs were grade 3 according to the common terminology of AEs. ICPIs were discontinued in 60% of patients and 50% received local corticosteroids alone. The literature review included 230 uveitis cases, of which 7% were granulomatous. The distributions of ICPIs, cancer, and type of uveitis were similar to our cohort. Ocular IRAEs appeared to be easily controlled by local or systemic corticosteroids and did not require routine discontinuation of ICPIs. Further work is still warranted to define the optimal management of ocular IRAEs.Entities:
Keywords: VKH; eye inflammation; immune checkpoint inhibitors; immunotherapy-related adverse events; orbitopathy; uveitis
Year: 2022 PMID: 36078923 PMCID: PMC9456546 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11174993
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Characteristics of patients with ICPI-induced ocular IRAEs.
| All ICPIs | Nivolumab | Pembrolizumab | Nivolumab + Ipilimumab | Nivolumab then Pembrolizumab | Durvalumab | Atezolizumab | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age, in years (±SD) | 59.4 (±12) | 59.5 (±10) | 66.3 (±11) | 54.4 (±12) | 59 | 59 (±12) | 57 |
| Male % ( | 60.7 (17) | 55.5 (5) | 85.7 (6) | 50 (4) | 100 (1) | 50 (1) | 100 (1) |
| Female % ( | 39.3 (11) | 44.4 (4) | 14.3 (1) | 50 (4) | 0 (0) | 50 (1) | - |
| Indication % ( | |||||||
| Melanoma | 46.4 (13) | 44.4 (4) | 42.8 (3) | 62.5 (5) | 100 (1) | - | - |
| Lung adenocarcinoma | 21.4 (6) | 22.2 (2) | 28.6 (2) | 12.5 (1) | - | 50 (1) | - |
| Squamous cell lung cancer | 10.7 (3) | 22.2 (2) | 14.3 (1) | - | - | - | - |
| Renal cell carcinoma | 10.7 (3) | 11.1 (1) | 14.3 (1) | 12.5 (1) | - | - | - |
| Other | 10.7 (3) | - | - | 12.5 (1) | - | 50 (1) | 100 (1) |
| Mean time to occurrence in weeks (±SD) | 17.6 (±19) | 25 (±24) | 11 (±9) | 7 (±6) | 65 | 15 (±1) | 34 |
ICPI = immune checkpoint inhibitor; SD = standard deviation.
Figure 1Distribution of ICPIs.
Types of ocular IRAEs according to the ICPI.
| All ICPIs, | Nivolumab, | Pembrolizumab, | Nivolumab + Ipilimumab, | Ipilimumab then Pembrolizumab, | Durvalumab, | Atezolizumab, | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All ocular IRAEs | 36 | 13 | 9 | 8 | 2 | 3 | 1 |
| Uveitis | 25 (69.4%) | 9 | 5 | 8 | 1 | 2 | - |
| - Anterior | 11 (30.6%) | 3 | 1 | 5 | 1 | 1 | - |
| - Intermediate | 4 (11.1%) | 3 | - | - | - | 1 | - |
| - Posterior | 3 (8.3%) | 1 | 1 | 1 | - | - | - |
| - Panuveitis | 7 (19.4%) | 2 | 3 | 2 | - | - | - |
| - Bilateral | 20 | 7 | 3 | 7 | 1 | 2 | - |
| Scleritis | 2 (5.5%) | - | 1 | - | 1 | - | - |
| Keratitis | 2 (5.5%) | 2 | - | - | - | - | - |
| Keratoconjunctivitis | 2 (5.5%) | - | 1 | - | - | - | 1 |
| Sjögren’s syndrome | 3 (8.3%) | 1 | 1 | - | - | 1 | - |
| Optic neuritis | 1 (2.8%) | 1 | - | - | - | - | - |
| Orbitopathy | 1 (2.8%) | - | 1 | - | - | - | - |
Detailed ocular findings in patients with ICPI-induced uveitis.
| Gender/Age (Years) | ICPI | Ocular IRAE | B | A | G | S | Initial BCVA | Final BCVA | CTCAE Grade | Onset Time (Weeks) | Other IRAEs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | F/47 | durvalumab | Anterior and intermediate uveitis with epiretinal membrane | X | X | X | X | OD 1 | OD 1 | 3 | 14 | / |
| #2 | M/59 | ipilimumab; | Anterior uveitis (Tyndall 2+), scleritis, and bilateral optic nerve swelling | X | X | OD 0.9 | OD 1 | 2 | 65 | Myositis | ||
| #3 | F/36 | ipilimumab + nivolumab | Persistent anterior uveitis | X | X | OD 1 | 1–3 | 24 | Hepatitis | |||
| #4 | M/77 | ipilimumab + nivolumab | Anterior uveitis (Tyndall 2+) | X | X | OD 1 | 2 | 8 | Peripheral neuropathy | |||
| #5 | M/68 | ipilimumab + nivolumab | Panuveitis with mutton fat keratic precipitates | X | X | OD 0.8 | 3 | 6 | Interstitial nephritis | |||
| #6 | F/44 | ipilimumab + | Anterior uveitis (Tyndall 3+) | X | OD 1 | OD 0.9 | 3 | 3 | Hypophysitis | |||
| #7 | M/52 | ipilimumab + | Recurrent anterior uveitis with mutton fat keratic precipitate (Tyndall 1+) | X | X | X | OD 1 | OD 1 | 2 | 2 | Vitiligo | |
| #8 | F/52 | ipilimumab + | Hypertensive posterior uveitis | X | OD 0.7 | OD 0.8 | 3 | 6 | Cochlear neuritis | |||
| #9 | F/58 | ipilimumab + | VKH-like syndrome: anterior uveitis with multiple white spots on the posterior pole | X | OD 0.7 | OD 1 | 3 | 4 | Lymphocytic meningitis and vitiligo | |||
| #10 | M/44 | ipilimumab + nivolumab | Anterior uveitis with mutton fat keratic precipitates and anterior Tyndall effect 2+ | X | X | X | OD 1 | OD 1 | 2 | 3 | Vitiligo | |
| #11 | M/59 | nivolumab | Anterior uveitis | X | X | X | X | OD 1 | OD 1 | 1–3 | 4 | / |
| #12 | M/64 | nivolumab | Anterior and intermediate uveitis with iris nodules | X | X | X | OD 1 | OD 1 | 3 | 8 | / | |
| #13 | F/76 | nivolumab | Hypertensive anterior and intermediate uveitis with iris nodules | X | X | X | OD 0.4 | 3 | 45 | / | ||
| #14 | M/64 | nivolumab | Unilateral intermediate uveitis with bilateral papillitis and unilateral acute anterior ischemic optic neuropathy | X | OD 1 | OD 1 | 3 | 8 | Hypertensive meningitis | |||
| #15 | F/46 | nivolumab | Acute panuveitis with bilateral choroidal folds and bilateral papillitis | X | X | X | OD 0.3 | OD 0.1 | 3 | 8 | / | |
| #16 | F/56 | nivolumab | Recurrent hypertensive panuveitis with multifocal exudative serous detachment and retinal vasculitis | X | X | OD 1 | OD 0.7 | 3 | 13 | / | ||
| #17 | F/40 | nivolumab | Persistent posterior uveitis with peripheral multifocal choroiditis and bilateral optic nerve edema | X | OD 1 | OD 1 | 3 | 13 | Pancreatitis | |||
| #18 | M/45 | pembrolizumab | Anterior uveitis and scleritis | 1-4 | 34 | Hypothyroidism | ||||||
| #19 | M/59 | pembrolizumab | Persistent panuveitis with mutton fat keratic, Tyndall 1+, macular and papillary edema | X | X | X | X | OD 1 | OD 0.9 | 3 | 8 | / |
| #20 | M/61 | pembrolizumab | Panuveitis with mutton fat keratic precipitates, macular edema and dry eye syndrome | X | X | X | OD 0.7 | 3 | 17 | / | ||
| #21 | F/76 | pembrolizumab | Panuveitis (vitritis grade 3+) | X | X | OD enucleation | OD enucleation | 3 | 5 | Colitis | ||
| #22 | M/73 | pembrolizumab | Persistent posterior uveitis with macular edema | X | OD 0.7 | OD 0.6 | 3 | 5 | Vitiligo |
IRAE = immune-related adverse event; B = bilateral; A = acute; G = granulomatous; S = synechia; BCVA = best-corrected visual acuity (decimal scale); CTCAE = common terminology criteria for adverse events; F = female; M = male; OD = right eye; OS = left eye.
Detailed description of non-uveitic ocular IRAEs.
| Gender/Age | ICPI | Ocular IRAE | CTCAE Grade | Onset Time (Weeks) | Other IRAEs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #23 | F/57 | atezolizumab | Keratoconjunctivitis sicca and conjunctival fibrosis | 1–2 | 34 | Lichen planus |
| #24 | M/71 | durvalumab | Sjögren’s syndrome with bilateral conjunctivitis sicca and unilateral blepharitis; no autoimmunity; normal accessory salivary gland biopsy | 1–2 | 16 | / |
| #25 | M/69 | nivolumab | Sjögren’s syndrome with unilateral chronic ulcerative keratitis and corneal graft rejection, antinuclear antibodies without specificity | 3 | 78 | / |
| #26 | M/62 | nivolumab | Keratitis | 4 | 49 | / |
| #27 | M/70 | pembrolizumab | Keratoconjunctivitis sicca | 1 | 6 | / |
| #28 | M/80 | pembrolizumab | Bilateral inflammatory orbitopathy with ophthalmoplegia | 3–4 | 6 | Myocarditis |
Management and outcomes of ocular IRAES.
| Case | Ocular IRAE Type | ICPI Discontinuation | Local Treatment | Systemic Treatment | Ophthalmic Evolution | Neoplastic Evolution |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Uveitis | Yes | Steroid eye drops | / | Complete remission | Worsening |
| #2 | Uveitis | Yes | Steroid eye drops | Oral steroids | Complete remission | Stable |
| #3 | Uveitis | Yes | / | / | Unknown | Unknown |
| #4 | Uveitis | Yes † | Steroid eye drops | / | Complete remission | Stable |
| #5 | Uveitis | Yes | Steroid eye drops | Oral steroids 1 mg/kg/d | Complete remission | Stable |
| #6 | Uveitis | Yes † | Subconjunctival steroids | / | Stable | Stable |
| #7 | Uveitis | Yes | Steroid eye drops and lacrimal substitute | / | Complete remission | Partial remission |
| #8 | Uveitis | U | Steroid eye drops | Oral steroids 1 mg/kg/d | Partial remission | Complete remission |
| #9 | Uveitis | Yes | Steroid eye drops | IV and oral steroids | Complete remission | Complete remission |
| #10 | Uveitis | Yes † | Steroid and atropine eye drops | / | Complete remission | Stable |
| #11 | Uveitis | No | Subconjunctival steroids | Oral steroids 0.5 mg/kg/d | Complete remission | Complete remission |
| #12 | Uveitis | No | Steroid eye drops | / | Partial remission | Unknown |
| #13 | Uveitis | U | Unspecified | / | Unknown | Unknown |
| #14 | Uveitis + optic neuropathy | Yes | / | / | (Worsening then) partial remission | Unknown |
| #15 | Uveitis | Yes | Intravitreal steroids and steroid eye drops | IV steroids 500 mg × 3, then oral 1 mg/kg/d | Stable | Complete remission |
| #16 | Uveitis | No | Intravitreal steroids, steroid eye drops | Oral steroids 1 mg/kg/d | Partial remission | Stable |
| #17 | Uveitis | Yes | / | Oral steroids 0.5 mg/kg/d (for other IRAEs) | Partial remission | Worsening |
| #18 | Uveitis + ocular surface | Yes | Steroid eye drops | Oral steroids 3 mg/kg/d | Partial remission | Stable |
| #19 | Uveitis | Yes | Subconjunctival steroids, steroid eye drops | Oral steroids 1 mg/kg/d | Partial remission | Stable |
| #20 | Uveitis + ocular surface | No | Steroid eye drops | / | Complete remission | Complete remission |
| #21 | Uveitis | Yes | Subconjunctival steroids, steroid eye drops, atropine eye drops | Oral steroids (for other IRAEs) | Complete remission | Partial remission |
| #22 | Uveitis | No | Steroid eye drops, ketorolac tromethamine | (Topical tacrolimus) | Complete remission | Complete remission |
| #23 | Ocular surface | U | Steroid eye drops and scleral lenses | / | Unknown | Unknown |
| #24 | Ocular surface | Yes | Lacrimal substitute | / | Partial remission | Worsening |
| #25 | Ocular surface | Yes | Subconjunctival steroids, | Oral steroids 1 mg/kg/d | Worsening | Worsening |
| #26 | Ocular surface | Yes | Ciclosporin eye drops | Oral steroids 1 mg/kg/d | Partial remission | Stable |
| #27 | Ocular surface | Yes | / | / | Partial remission | Complete remission |
| #28 | Orbitopathy | Yes | / | IV steroids 1 mg/kg/d | Complete remission | Partial remission |
† nivolumab monotherapy; U = Unknown; d = day; w = week; m = month.
Management of ICPI-induced uveitis.
| Anterior | Intermediate Uveitis, | Posterior | Panuveitis, | Total of | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICPI management | |||||
| - Permanent discontinuation | 5 (45) | 2 (50) | 1 (33) | 5 (71) | 13 (52) |
| - Continuation | 2 (18) | 1 (25) | 1 (33) | 2 (28) | 6 (24) |
| - Monotherapy 1 | 3 (27) | - | - | - | 3 (12) |
| - Unknown status | 1 (9) | 1 (25) | 1 (33) | - | 3 (12) |
| Topical and systemic steroids | 3 (27) | - | 1 (33) | 6 (86) | 10 (40) |
| Topical steroids only | 7 (64) | 3 (75) | 1 (33) | 1 (14) | 12 (48) |
| Systemic steroids only | - | - | 1 (33) | - | 1 (4) |
| None | 1 (9) | 1 (25) | - | - | 2 (8) |
1 Nivolumab monotherapy instead of ipilimumab/nivolumab combination therapy.
Figure 2Ocular outcomes depending on the type of uveitis, in %.
Reported cases of ICPI-induced uveitis.
| Type of Uveitis | ICPI |
| ICPI Discontinuation | Management | Neoplastic Evolution | Original Articles |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All types | All ICPIs | 143 | ||||
| Anterior | All ICPIs | 62 | ||||
| atezolizumab | 1 | N | Local steroids | Progression (1) | [ | |
| durvalumab | 2 | N (2) | Local steroids (2) | Unknown (2) | [ | |
| ipilimumab | 16 | N (2) | Local + systemic steroids (6) | Progression (6) | [ | |
| ipilimumab + nivolumab | 15 | N (3) | Local + systemic steroids (4) | Stable (2) | [ | |
| ipilimumab + pembrolizumab | 1 | Local + systemic steroids (1) | Stable (1) | [ | ||
| nivolumab | 19 | N (10) | Local + systemic steroids (9) | Progression (2) | [ | |
| pembrolizumab | 8 | N (2) | Local + systemic steroids (3) | Progression (1) | [ | |
| Posterior | All ICPIs | 28 | ||||
| atezolizumab | 2 | Y (2) | Intravitreal steroids (1) | Unknown (2) | [ | |
| cemiplimab | 1 | Y | Local + systemic steroids | Unknown | [ | |
| durvalumab | 1 | N | Systemic steroids | Unknown | [ | |
| ipilimumab | 5 | Y (4) | Local + systemic steroids (1) Systemic steroids (3) | Progression to death (1) | [ | |
| ipilimumab + nivolumab | 3 | Y (2) | Systemic steroids (2) | Partial response (1) | [ | |
| ipilimumab + pembrolizumab | 1 | Y | Local + systemic steroids | Unknown | [ | |
| nivolumab | 6 | Y (4) | Intra-ocular steroid implant (1) | Progression to death (2) | [ | |
| pembrolizumab | 9 | Y (7) | Local steroids (2) | Progression (3) | [ | |
| Panuveitis | All ICPIs | 26 | ||||
| ipilimumab | 2 | Y (1) | Local + systemic steroids (1) | Unknown (2) | [ | |
| ipilimumab + nivolumab | 5 | Y (2) | Systemic steroids (1) | Partial response (2) | [ | |
| nivolumab | 6 | Y (4) | Local + systemic steroids (2) | Stable (1) | [ | |
| Pembrolizumab | 13 | Y (9) | Local + systemic steroids (6) | Progression (3) | [ | |
| VKH-like | All ICPIs | 27 | ||||
| atezolizumab | 1 | Y | Local + systemic steroids | Unknown | [ | |
| ipilimumab | 5 | Y (3) | Local + systemic steroids (2) | Stable (1) | [ | |
| ipilimumab + nivolumab | 3 | Y (2) | Local and systemic | Progression (1) | [ | |
| nivolumab | 10 | Y (5) | Local + systemic steroids (6) | Progression (1) | [ | |
| pembrolizumab | 8 | Y (3) | Local + systemic steroids (3) | Partial response (1) | [ |
M = anti-PD1 monotherapy instead of anti-PD1/anti-CTLA-4 combination; N = no; Y = yes.
VKH and VKH-like syndrome reported after the use of ICPI.
| Type ( | Cancer ( | ICPI ( | Original Articles |
|---|---|---|---|
| Complete VKH syndrome (7) | Melanoma (6) | ipilimumab (3) | [ |
| Incomplete VKH syndrome with neurological manifestations (5) | Melanoma (2) | atezolizumab (1) | [ |
| Incomplete VKH syndrome with cutaneous manifestations (6) | Melanoma (6) whom one choroidal melanoma | ipilimumab + nivolumab (2) | [ |
| VKH-like uveitis (9) | Melanoma (5) | ipilimumab (2) | [ |