Abstract

Immune checkpoint inhibitor (CPI) therapy is approved for the treatment of many cancers. As its use becomes more prevalent, sequential trials with different CPIs as monotherapy or combination therapy will become more common. It is thought that the increased cumulative dose of CPIs over multiple trials increases the risk of immune-related adverse events (irAEs). However, it is not known if using one CPI combination increases the risk of developing irAEs during the subsequent trial of a different CPI combination. Here, we present a patient with multiple episodes of high-grade irAEs over the course of sequential trials of combination CPIs. A 65-year-old female patient with metastatic renal cell cancer received two trials of combination CPIs. During the first trial with durvalumab and tremelimumab, she had CPI-induced grade 2 skin rashes and primary hypothyroidism with a mild elevation in lipase, normal antithyroid antibody profile, and normal blood glucose. Due to progression after the first trial, her regimen was changed to ipilimumab and nivolumab combination therapy. She subsequently presented to the emergency room with diabetic ketoacidosis on the sixth week following treatment initiation and was diagnosed with new-onset insulin-dependent type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM) with a negative antibody profile for DM. Immune CPIs cause irAEs by increasing immune activity against self-antigens. Sequential trials of CPIs may increase the risk of irAEs by increasing the cumulative CPI dose, or by organ injury inflicted by the first set of CPIs which is tipped “over the edge” by subsequent trials. We believe that the latter mechanism could be responsible for our case. Sequential CPI therapy should be planned carefully with increased surveillance for the early diagnosis and treatment of irAEs.

Highlights

  • Immunotherapy is changing the landscape of cancer therapy

  • We explore whether one checkpoint inhibitor (CPI) combination therapy can predispose patients to immune-related adverse events (irAEs) during the subsequent trial of CPIs

  • We have described a patient with metastatic renal cell carcinoma who was diagnosed with grade 2-4 irAEs over the course of two sequentially administered combination CPIs

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Summary

Introduction

Immunotherapy is changing the landscape of cancer therapy. Checkpoint inhibitors (CPIs) are becoming a mainstay for cancer treatment. After the approval of ipilimumab for melanoma, several CPIs have been approved for cancers of the lung, kidney, renal, and colon, among others. The life expectancy of patients with cancer has improved significantly. CPIs are monoclonal antibodies targeting CTLA-4, PD1, or PD-L1 receptors, restoring the anti-tumor activity of the immune system. The primary role of these receptors is to induce immune tolerance and protect the body from autoimmunity. CPI binding against these receptors increases T-cell-mediated antitumor activity [1]

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