Abstract 2035P
Background
Multiple international guidelines suggest that pre-treatment cardiac markers should be taken prior to each cycle of treatment to support the early diagnosis and treatment of immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) induced myocarditis (1). As a large regional tertiary cancer centre with an established cardio-oncology service early adoption of baseline and subsequent cardiac surveillance has been implemented and its utility evaluated.
Methods
A retrospective analysis of patients whom had undergone baseline cardiac assessment prior to receiving ICI treatment at the Clatterbridge Cancer Centre between October 2022 and March 2023 was performed. Within the regional protocol all patients with abnormal cardiac markers (Pro-B Naturetic Peptide (Pro-BNP) >400 ng/L and or a high sensitivity troponin T (TropT) >14 ng/L) were subsequently monitored with pre-cycle cardiac biochemical monitoring for the first 3 cycles of ICI treatment.
Results
400 patients who commenced ICI treatment underwent baseline cardiac screening. Of these 169 patients (42.2%) had abnormal biomarkers: 36% (n=61) elevated TropT; 32% (n=54) elevated pro-BNP and 32% (n=54) had elevations in both. Within this cohort 3.3% (n=13) patients were diagnosed with ICI-induced myocarditis; 12 confirmed on cardiac MRI (cMRI) and 1 clinically diagnosed due to clinical instability. Of these 69% (n=9) patients had abnormal baselines and thus had pre-cycle monitoring; 4 did not. Of these 9; 8 were detected through symptoms alone; 1 patient was found to have elevated biomarkers but had already been clinically assessed prior to treatment and had been admitted prior to the biomarker results being reviewed.
Conclusions
Baseline cardiac assessment is useful, as the majority of patients that go on to develop ICI myocarditis have abnormal baseline values. However, the clinical utility of pre-cycle screening has not demonstrated enhanced or earlier detection of myocarditis compared to clinical assessment and represents an area of potential cost saving. Patients are either presenting mid-cycle or are identified via symptomatic review therefore investment is better placed in education and training to optimize clinical recognition and timely management.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
R. Dobson: Financial Interests, Personal, Invited Speaker: BMS, Roche. N. Garbutt: Financial Interests, Personal, Invited Speaker: BMS. T. Guinan: Financial Interests, Personal, Invited Speaker: BMS, MSD, Roche, Sanofi. A.C. Olsson-Brown: Financial Interests, Personal, Invited Speaker: BMS, MSD, Roche, Novartis, AZ, Eisai, B-I. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
2046P - The importance of communicating bad news in medical education
Presenter: Georgios Goumas
Session: Poster session 06
2047P - Neutrop: A descriptive, observational study for G-CSF prescription in daily practice
Presenter: Florian Scotté
Session: Poster session 06
2048P - Frequency and clinical relevance of drug-drug interactions with oxycodone among patients with cancer
Presenter: Lotte Hulskotte
Session: Poster session 06
2049P - Osimertinib-related muscle cramps as a common adverse event: A real-world data analysis in the post-approval setting
Presenter: Gisele Moreira
Session: Poster session 06
2050P - Integrating ayurveda herbs with standard of care for management of cancer or cancer treatment related anorexia
Presenter: Yogesh Bendale
Session: Poster session 06
2051P - E-PRO within comprehensive companion program for patients undergoing systemic cancer treatment to reduce emergency visits and inpatient admission in a Peruvian institution
Presenter: Patricia Rioja Viera
Session: Poster session 06
2052P - Adverse events in FLOT chemotherapy for locally advanced gastric cancer: An observational study of pre- and post-operative toxicity profiles
Presenter: Camila Oliveira
Session: Poster session 06
2053P - Dehospitalization through outpatient drug release in clinical pharmacy as a strategic cost-minimization action in a public oncology hospital in the Eastern Amazon: A quantitative analysis
Presenter: Kalysta Borges
Session: Poster session 06
2054P - Metastatic cancer patients hospitalized at initial diagnosis: When does rescue systemic therapy make sense? ONIRIS - A national, prospective study
Presenter: Colin Vercueil
Session: Poster session 06
2055P - Multidisciplinary Tumor-ICU Board: Enhancing care for critically Ill patients with solid tumors in the ICU
Presenter: Francisco Javier Ros Montana
Session: Poster session 06