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Immunotherapy-Induced Airway Disease: A New Pattern of Lung Toxicity of Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors

Georgia Mitropoulou, Cécile Daccord, Alain Sauty, Antoine Pasche, Bernard Egger, Veronica Aedo Lopez, Igor Letovanec, Catherine Beigelman‐Aubry, Laurent Nicod, Romain Lazor

2020Respiration28 citationsDOI

Abstract

Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have been shown to improve overall and progression-free survival in various cancers but have been associated with various immune-related adverse events (IRAEs), including interstitial lung disease, especially organizing pneumonia. We report 2 cases of isolated severe airway disease attributable to ICIs, a rarely reported pattern of lung toxicity. The first patient received nivolumab with or without ipilimumab in a randomized double-blind trial for locoregional metastatic melanoma. The second patient was treated with nivolumab for lung adenocarcinoma. An IRAE was suspected in both cases due to a temporal relationship between ICI initiation and symptom onset. ICIs were stopped, and high-dose prednisone, inhaled corticosteroids, and bronchodilators were administered, allowing a rapid clinical and functional improvement in Patient 1. In Patient 2, despite prolonged high-dose prednisone, only a stabilization of forced expiratory volume in 1 s could be achieved, and the disease course was complicated by respiratory infections resulting in further loss of lung function. The patient died 1 year later due to progression of metastatic disease. These 2 cases suggest that pulmonary IRAEs secondary to ICIs may present as isolated bronchitis or bronchiolitis, with variable outcomes following ICI withdrawal and systemic corticosteroids.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineNivolumabPrednisonePulmonary toxicityInternal medicineAdverse effectIpilimumabPulmonary function testingLungOncologyImmunotherapyCancerCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersLung Cancer Treatments and MutationsPeptidase Inhibition and Analysis
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