Clinical Immunology Communications (Jun 2024)

First reported use of immune checkpoint inhibitor for treatment of cancer in a patient with acquired hemophilia A

  • Mariam A Mostafa,
  • Sheref Elseidy,
  • Reham Ali Metwally,
  • Amir Mahmoud,
  • Ali Abdelhay,
  • Farhan S. Imran

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
pp. 41 – 44

Abstract

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Acquired hemophilia A is a rare but serious bleeding disorder that occurs because of neutralizing autoantibodies, also called inhibitors that target coagulation factor VIII (FVIII). Although it is a rare disorder, it has high morbidity and mortality with serious, sometimes life-threatening bleeding, often occurring. Immunotherapy with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) is now a key pillar in treatment of malignancies. They have improved outcomes in malignancy but given their mechanism of action, which stimulates the immune response, autoimmune-associated adverse effects are a concern. Several case reports have identified a risk of AHA occurrence in patients treated with ICI. There are no case reports documenting the use or outcomes of ICI in patients with pre-existing AHA. Here we present the first ever case of a patient with AHA in complete remission treated successfully with ICI for lung cancer without relapse in AHA.