Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care (Jun 2024)

Management of immune check-point inhibitor-associated colitis in patients with advanced metastatic cancers: A review article

  • Abubakar Tauseef,
  • Maryam Zafar,
  • Sameed Abdul Hameed Siddiqui,
  • Jalal Dufani,
  • Bradley DeVrieze,
  • Muazzam Mirza,
  • Joseph Thirumalareddy,
  • Akshat Sood,
  • Mohsin Mirza

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_1438_23
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 7
pp. 2562 – 2567

Abstract

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Immune check-point inhibitors (ICPi) are immunomodulating agents, which have revolutionized the management of advanced metastatic cancers. Being immunomodulating agents, they are predisposed to causing colitis. This descriptive review article emphasized on the management of ICPi-associated colitis in advanced metastatic cancers. We used PubMed, Google Scholar, Scopus, and Embase databases for literature review, and terminologies commonly searched were “management,” “immune check-point inhibitors,” “colitis,” “metastatic,” “cancers,” “literature,” and “review.” We reviewed a total of 11 articles done in the last 15 years relevant to ICPi colitis and its management; all the articles showed that diarrhea and colitis are the most common adverse effects observed in patients on ICPi, but prior to establishing the diagnosis of ICPi-causing colitis, possibility of Clostridium difficle or cytomegalovirus infections should be ruled out. Once the diagnosis of ICPi colitis is established, treatment should be started depending upon the severity of colitis. In mild severity, discontinuation of ICPi can resolve the symptoms but, in most of the patients with moderate to high severity of colitis, corticosteroids are considered a cornerstone treatment. Patients unresponsive to steroid treatment should be re-evaluated for infections after which anti-TNF therapy—infliximab or vedolizumab, cyclosporine, mycophenolate mofetil—can be considered.

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