Abstract 5944
Background
Disruption of the immune system using immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) can result in a multitude of immune-related adverse effects (irAE). While irAEs have been well-reported in clinical trials, the impact and magnitude in the real world is unclear.
Methods
Data was collected on patients with advanced malignancy who experienced a suspected irAE requiring admission to an academic hospital (02/11-10/18). Each case was comprehensively reviewed by a minimum of two reviewers, including one sub-specialist.
Results
From 2011-2018, there were 632 hospitalizations for suspected irAEs, and the majority (59.7%; N = 377) were confirmed irAEs from immunotherapy: PD1 (N = 194, 51.5%), CTLA4 (N = 92, 24.4%), CTLA4 + PD1 (N = 76, 20.2%), PLD1 (N = 15, 4.0%). The most common irAEs were gastrointestinal (37.4%), pulmonary (14.9%), hepatic (13.5%), endocrine (16.2%), neurologic (9.0%), cardiac (6.9%), dermatologic (5.6%), rheumatologic (2.9%), hematologic (2.1%), renal (1.9%), and allergy (1.1%). 10.3% of admissions had multiple toxicities. Median length of stay was 5 days (IQR, 3-8). Majority of patients (89.1%) required continuation of immunosuppressive medication on discharge. Inpatient toxicity led to ICI discontinuation in 78.1% of admissions. Overall, there were 11.3 irAE admissions per 100 patients treated with ICI and 2.1 irAE admissions per 100 ICI administrations.
Conclusions
irAEs from ICI can result in prolonged hospitalizations, need for immunosuppression, and ICI discontinuation, which can have detrimental effects on oncologic outcomes. Consequently, there is a critical need for coordinated multidisciplinary approach, comprehensive provider education, and translational research programs for early detection and intervention.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
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