OncoImmunology (Jan 2019)

Clinical characterization of colitis arising from anti-PD-1 based therapy

  • Daniel Y Wang,
  • Meghan J Mooradian,
  • DaeWon Kim,
  • Neil J Shah,
  • Sarah E Fenton,
  • Robert M Conry,
  • Rutika Mehta,
  • Ann W. Silk,
  • Alice Zhou,
  • Margaret L Compton,
  • Rami N Al-Rohil,
  • Sunyoung Lee,
  • Amber L Voorhees,
  • Lisa Ha,
  • Svetlana McKee,
  • Jacqueline T Norrell,
  • Janice Mehnert,
  • Igor Puzanov,
  • Jeffrey A Sosman,
  • Sunandana Chandra,
  • Geoffrey T Gibney,
  • Suthee Rapisuwon,
  • Zeynep Eroglu,
  • Ryan Sullivan,
  • Douglas B Johnson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2018.1524695
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1

Abstract

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Colitis is a frequent, clinically-significant immune-related adverse event caused by anti-programmed death-1 (PD-1). The clinical features, timing, and management of colitis with anti-PD-1-based regimens are not well-characterized. Patients with advanced melanoma that received either anti-PD-1 monotherapy (“monotherapy”) or combined with ipilimumab (“combination therapy”) were screened from 8 academic medical centers, to identify those with clinically-relevant colitis (colitis requiring systemic steroids). Of 1261 patients who received anti-PD-1-based therapy, 109 experienced colitis. The incidence was 3.2% (30/937) and 24.4% (79/324) in the monotherapy and combination therapy cohorts, respectively. Patients with colitis from combination therapy had significantly earlier symptom onset (7.2 weeks vs 25.4 weeks, p < 0.0001), received higher steroid doses (median prednisone equivalent 1.5 mg/kg vs 1.0 mg/kg, p = 0.0015) and experienced longer steroid tapers (median 6.0 vs 4.0 weeks, p = 0.0065) compared to monotherapy. Infliximab use and steroid-dose escalation occurred more frequently in the combination therapy cohort compared to monotherapy. Nearly all patients had resolution of their symptoms although one patient died from complications. Anti-PD-1 associated colitis has a variable clinical presentation, and is more frequent and severe when associated with combination therapy. This variability in checkpoint-inhibitor associated colitis suggests that further optimization of treatment algorithms is needed.

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