Enterocolitis in Patients With Cancer After Antibody Blockade of Cytotoxic T-Lymphocyte–Associated Antigen 4
National Institutes of Health · National Cancer Institute · +1 more institution
Abstract
The overall objective tumor response rate was 14%. We observed several immune mediated toxicities including dermatitis, enterocolitis, hypophysitis, uveitis, hepatitis, and nephritis. Enterocolitis, defined by grade 3/4 clinical presentation and/or biopsy documentation, was the most common major toxicity (21% of patients). It presented with diarrhea, and biopsies showed both neutrophilic and lymphocytic inflammation. Most patients who developed enterocolitis responded to high-dose systemic corticosteroids. There was no evidence that steroid administration affected tumor responses. Five patients developed perforation or required colectomy. Four other patients with steroid-refractory enterocolitis appeared to respond promptly to tumor necrosis factor alpha blockade with infliximab. Objective tumor response rates in patients with enterocolitis were 36% for MM and 35% for RCC, compared with 11% and 2% in patients without enterocolitis, respectively (P = .0065 for MM and P = .0016 for RCC).
CTLA4 seems to be a significant component of tolerance to tumor and in protection against immune mediated enterocolitis and these phenomena are significantly associated in cancer patients.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.33
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
15- KEKimberly E BeckCorresponding
National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute
- JBJoseph Blansfield
National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute
- KQKhoi Q. Tran
National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute
- ALAndrew L. Feldman
National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute
- MSMarybeth S. Hughes
National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Ipilimumab
- Enterocolitis
- Immunology
- Internal medicine
- Cancer
- Gastroenterology
- Immunotherapy
- Good health and well-being