Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer (Oct 2020)

Impact of corticosteroid therapy on the outcomes of hepatocellular carcinoma treated with immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy

  • Dominik Bettinger,
  • Bo Yu,
  • David Szafron,
  • Yinghong Wang,
  • Abdul Rafeh Naqash,
  • Mahvish Muzaffar,
  • Uqba Khan,
  • Yi-Hsiang Huang,
  • David J Pinato,
  • Ahmed Kaseb,
  • Anwaar Saeed,
  • Tomi Jun,
  • Sirish Dharmapuri,
  • Musharraf Navaid,
  • ChiehJu Lee,
  • Anushi Bulumulle,
  • Sonal Paul,
  • Petros Fessas,
  • Neil Nimkar,
  • Hannah Hildebrand,
  • Tiziana Pressiani,
  • Yehia I Abugabal,
  • Nicola Personeni,
  • Jingky Lozano-Kuehne,
  • Lorenza Rimassa,
  • Celina Ang,
  • Thomas U Marron

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2020-000726
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2

Abstract

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The impact of corticosteroid therapy (CT) on efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) is undefined in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We evaluated whether CT administered at baseline (bCT) or concurrently with ICI (cCT) influences overall (OS), progression-free survival (PFS) and overall response rates (ORR) in 341 patients collected across 3 continents. Of 304 eligible patients, 78 (26%) received >10 mg prednisone equivalent daily either as bCT (n=14, 5%) or cCT (n=64, 21%). Indications for CT included procedure/prophylaxis (n=37, 47%), management of immune-related adverse event (n=27, 35%), cancer-related symptoms (n=8, 10%) or comorbidities (n=6, 8%). Neither overall CT, bCT nor cCT predicted for worse OS, PFS nor ORR in univariable and multivariable analyses (p>0.05). CT for cancer-related indications predicted for shorter PFS (p<0.001) and was associated with refractoriness to ICI (75% vs 33%, p=0.05) compared with cancer-unrelated indications. This is the first study to demonstrate that neither bCT nor cCT influence response and OS following ICI in HCC. Worse outcomes in CT recipients for cancer-related indications appear driven by the poor prognosis associated with symptomatic HCC.