Anti-TNF-refractory colitis after checkpoint inhibitor therapy: Possible role of CMV-mediated immunopathogenesis

Lankes K, Hundorfean G, Harrer T, Pommer AJ, Agaimy A, Angelovska I, Tajmir-Riahi A, Göhl J, Schuler G, Neurath M, Hohenberger W, Heinzerling L (2016)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2016

Journal

Book Volume: 5

Pages Range: e1128611

Journal Issue: 6

DOI: 10.1080/2162402X.2015.1128611

Abstract

Immune-related adverse events (irAEs) induced by checkpoint inhibitors are well known. Since fatal outcomes have been reported early detection and adequate management are crucial. In particular, colitis is frequently observed and can result in intestinal perforation. This is the first report of an autoimmune colitis that was treated according to algorithms but became resistant due to a CMV reactivation. The 32-y-old male patient with metastatic melanoma treated within an anti-PD-1/ipilimumab combination study developed severe immune-mediated colitis (CTCAE grade 3) with up to 18 watery stools per day starting 2 weeks after treatment initiation. After improving upon therapy with immunosuppressive treatment (high dose steroids and infliximab) combined with parenteral nutrition diarrhea again exacerbated. Additionally, the patient had asymptomatic grade 3 CTCAE amylase and lipase elevation. Colitis was monitored by weekly endoscopies and colon biopsies were analyzed histologically with CMV staining, multi-epitope ligand cartography (MELC) and qRT-PCR for inflammatory genes. In the course, CMV reactivation was detected in the colon and treated with antiviral medication in parallel to a reduction of corticosteroids. Subsequently, symptoms improved. The patient showed a complete response for 2 y now including regression of bone metastases. CMV reactivation under checkpoint inhibitor therapy in combination with immunosuppressive treatment for autoimmune side effects has to be considered in these patients and if present treated. Potentially, CMV reactivation is underdiagnosed. Treatment algorithms should include CMV diagnostics.

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How to cite

APA:

Lankes, K., Hundorfean, G., Harrer, T., Pommer, A.J., Agaimy, A., Angelovska, I.,... Heinzerling, L. (2016). Anti-TNF-refractory colitis after checkpoint inhibitor therapy: Possible role of CMV-mediated immunopathogenesis. OncoImmunology, 5(6), e1128611. https://doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2015.1128611

MLA:

Lankes, Katharina, et al. "Anti-TNF-refractory colitis after checkpoint inhibitor therapy: Possible role of CMV-mediated immunopathogenesis." OncoImmunology 5.6 (2016): e1128611.

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