Department of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, Allergy and Immunology, UC San Diego, San Diego, California, USA,
Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France.
Oncology. 2020;98(2):123-130. doi: 10.1159/000503566. Epub 2019 Oct 30.
Predicting the factors that increase the risk of immune-related pneumonitis, a potentially life-threatening complication of treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors for cancer, is a clinical challenge. Baseline clinical factors such as asthma may portend the development of pneumonitis due to pre-existing airway inflammation prior to immunotherapy.
The purpose of the study was to investigate whether a prior diagnosis of asthma is associated with an increased risk of immune-related pneumonitis in patients undergoing cancer immunotherapy.
Patients at the Moores Cancer Center at UC San Diego Health undergoing immunotherapy were identified on an IRB-approved protocol. Clinical charts were reviewed for asthma documented in the medical records and CT scans were reviewed during and after treatment. Pneumonitis was defined as the onset of new pulmonary symptoms with characteristic imaging findings during or after a patient's first course of immunotherapy that could not be readily explained as infection or a progression of malignancy. It was graded according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events.
A total of 187 patients were included. A diagnosis of asthma was found in the records of 26 cases (13.9%). Pneumonitis was found in 10 cases (5.35%); 50% were grade 2 and 50% were grade 3-4. Two of the grade 3-4 cases (40%) occurred in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer. Three patients with asthma developed pneumonitis (11.5% of patients with asthma), all grade 3-4. Only 28.6% of the non-asthma-pneumonitis cases were grade 3-4. All (100%) of the asthma-pneumonitis patients were former smokers, while 71.4% of the non-asthma-pneumonitis patients were former smokers.
A history of asthma may be associated with a higher grade of pneumonitis if it develops, and a history of smoking may augment this relationship.
预测癌症免疫治疗中免疫相关肺炎的风险因素是一个临床挑战,这种肺炎是一种潜在危及生命的并发症。哮喘等基线临床因素可能预示着在免疫治疗前存在气道炎症,从而导致肺炎的发生。
本研究旨在探讨癌症免疫治疗患者中既往哮喘诊断是否与免疫相关肺炎风险增加相关。
在 UC 圣地亚哥健康莫尔斯癌症中心,根据 IRB 批准的方案确定正在接受免疫治疗的患者。临床病历记录中记录了哮喘的情况,对 CT 扫描进行了审查,以评估在治疗期间和治疗后是否出现肺炎。肺炎定义为在患者首次免疫治疗过程中或之后出现新的肺部症状,并伴有特征性影像学表现,且不能轻易解释为感染或恶性肿瘤进展。根据常见不良事件术语标准对其进行分级。
共纳入 187 例患者。26 例(13.9%)患者病历中记录有哮喘诊断。10 例(5.35%)患者发现肺炎,其中 50%为 2 级,50%为 3-4 级。2 例 3-4 级病例(40%)发生在非小细胞肺癌患者中。3 例哮喘患者发生肺炎(哮喘患者的 11.5%),均为 3-4 级。非哮喘性肺炎患者中只有 28.6%为 3-4 级。所有(100%)哮喘性肺炎患者均为曾经吸烟者,而非哮喘性肺炎患者中 71.4%为曾经吸烟者。
如果发生肺炎,哮喘病史可能与更高的肺炎分级相关,而吸烟史可能会增强这种关系。