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Management of Immune-Related Adverse Events from Immune-Checkpoint Inhibitors in Advanced or Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma

Katharina Leucht, Nalyan Ali, Susan Foller, Marc‐Oliver Grimm

2022Cancers14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) are now, among other cancers, routinely used for the treatment of advanced or metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC). In mRCC various combinations of ICIs and inhibitors of the vascular epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase (VEGFR-TKIs) as well as dual checkpoint inhibition (nivolumab + ipilimumab), the latter for patients with intermediate and poor risk according to IMDC only (international metastatic renal cell carcinoma database consortium), are now standard of care in the first line setting. Therefore, a profound understanding of immune-related adverse events (irAE) and the differential diagnosis of adverse reactions caused by other therapeutic agents in combination therapies is of paramount importance. Here we describe prevention, early diagnosis and clinical management of the most relevant irAE derived from ICI treatment focusing on the new VEGFR-TKI/ICI combinations.

Topics & Concepts

NivolumabIpilimumabMedicineRenal cell carcinomaAdverse effectOncologyKidney cancerInternal medicineImmune systemSunitinibImmune checkpointImmunotherapyCancerImmunologyRenal cell carcinoma treatmentCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersPancreatic and Hepatic Oncology Research
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