Department of Dermatology, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Clin Cancer Res. 2016 Aug 15;22(16):4023-9. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-15-2872. Epub 2016 Mar 8.
Immunotherapy has experienced impressive progress in cancer treatment. Antibodies against PD-1 improved survival in different types of cancer including melanoma. They are generally well tolerated. However, skin toxicities including pruritus, rashes, and vitiligo are reported. Although frequent, they have not been characterized further yet. In this analysis, we aimed to systematically assess and characterize the adverse cutaneous reactions observed in patients with melanoma treated with anti-PD-1 antibodies.
Patients with melanoma were treated with anti-PD-1 antibodies within clinical trials and an early-access program. Adverse cutaneous eruptions that emerged in our melanoma patient cohort were systematically investigated and classified using histology and gene expression profiling in comparison with maculopapular drug rash, cutaneous GVHD, and the severe drug eruption toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN).
Between February 2013 and September 2015, 68 patients with stage IV melanoma were treated at the University Hospital Zurich (Zurich, Switzerland); 15 patients (22%) developed cutaneous reactions and 10 (15%) vitiligo. The cutaneous reactions ranged from small erythematous papules with mild pruritus to disseminated erythematous maculopapular rashes (MPR) without signs of epidermal involvement to severe MPRs, including epidermal detachment and mucosal involvement. Although skin involvement varied from mild rash to bullous drug eruptions, gene expression profiling pathogenically classified all investigated cases as TEN-like reactions.
As predicted by the PD-1 knockout mouse, anti-PD-1 antibodies frequently cause adverse cutaneous reactions. Gene expression profiling reminds in all cases of a TEN-like pattern, suggesting that PD-1/PD-L1 interaction is required to preserve epidermal integrity during inflammatory skin reactions. Clin Cancer Res; 22(16); 4023-9. ©2016 AACR.
免疫疗法在癌症治疗方面取得了令人瞩目的进展。抗 PD-1 抗体改善了包括黑色素瘤在内的多种癌症的生存。这些药物通常具有良好的耐受性。然而,也会出现皮肤毒性反应,包括瘙痒、皮疹和白癜风。尽管这些毒性反应很常见,但尚未对其进行进一步的特征描述。在本分析中,我们旨在系统评估和描述接受抗 PD-1 抗体治疗的黑色素瘤患者出现的不良皮肤反应。
在临床试验和早期准入计划中,对黑色素瘤患者使用抗 PD-1 抗体进行治疗。在我们的黑色素瘤患者队列中,出现的不良皮肤反应通过组织学和基因表达谱分析进行了系统研究和分类,并与斑丘疹性药物疹、皮肤移植物抗宿主病和严重药物反应中毒性表皮坏死松解症(TEN)进行了比较。
2013 年 2 月至 2015 年 9 月,在瑞士苏黎世大学医院共治疗了 68 例 IV 期黑色素瘤患者;其中 15 例(22%)患者出现皮肤反应,10 例(15%)患者出现白癜风。皮肤反应从轻度瘙痒的小红斑丘疹到弥漫性红斑丘疹(MPR),但无表皮受累,再到严重的 MPR,包括表皮脱落和黏膜受累,范围广泛。尽管皮肤受累从轻度皮疹到大疱性药物疹不等,但基因表达谱分析从发病机制上将所有研究病例归类为 TEN 样反应。
正如 PD-1 基因敲除小鼠所预测的那样,抗 PD-1 抗体经常引起不良皮肤反应。基因表达谱分析提示所有病例均呈现 TEN 样模式,这表明 PD-1/PD-L1 相互作用是在炎症性皮肤反应中维持表皮完整性所必需的。临床癌症研究;22(16);4023-9。©2016 AACR。