Abstract 97P
Background
Myocarditis is a rare adverse effect of immune-checkpoint inhibitor therapy (ICI) associated with a high fatality rate and no clear predeterminants. European Society of Cardiology suggests baseline cardiac assessment and serial monitoring with ICI treatment. The volume of investigations recommended has been a barrier to adoption in practice.
Methods
We conducted a prospective study of clinical utility of baseline and serial cardiac assessment in a UK tertiary hospital. Patients were risk stratified by cardiac history, risk factors, baseline bloods including cardiac biomarkers and cardiac investigations, repeated at 3-4 weeks and 6-8 weeks. Aims; test feasibility; assess the value in risk stratifying patients to predict risk; determine if serial monitoring identified early cardiac toxicity.
Results
175 patients, 86 High risk, 89 Low risk. 8/175 patients baseline troponin >30. 28/175 patients baseline BNP >400. 2 patients had a troponin rise at 3-4 week, neither developed cardiotoxicity. 7 developed a troponin rise at 6-8 weeks, none developed cardiotoxicity. 32 patients had a BNP rise at 3-4 weeks. 9 significant. 1 patient BNP increased to >1000 without cardiotoxicity. 5 patients BNP approximately doubled; 2 patients rose >1000, 1 without cardiotoxicity, 1 who developed myocarditis later. 2 symptomatic patients with raised biomarkers and were treated for cardiotoxicity. 1 presented in SVT, LVEF 33%, CMR negative for myocarditis. 1 with syncopal episodes. In both cases biomarkers reduced on steroids, ICI was terminated.
Conclusions
All patients who developed cardiotoxicity were screened as high risk. 2 patients with cardiotoxicity were identified through clinical assessment not serial monitoring. Interpretation of cardiac biomarkers should accompany careful clinical assessment and liaison with cardiology. Baseline assessment supports decision making. Risk stratification may be a way to streamline monitoring.
Legal entity responsible for the study
The author.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
The author has declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
31P - Peripheral-blood Immune-predictors of pathological complete response in patients with triple-negative breast cancer undergoing neoadjuvant chemo-immunotherapy
Presenter: Celeste Santoro
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
32P - Immune T cell subsets dynamics in the early TNBC treatment setting
Presenter: Rocío Martín Lozano
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
33P - Tumor-specific CD4 Th1 responses in long-term responder melanoma patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors.
Presenter: Jessica Mathiot
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
34P - Linking early immunity changes to clinical outcomes in cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma following anti-programmed death cell-1 (PD-1) treatment
Presenter: Marcella Scala
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
36P - Exploring the role of soluble B7-H3 (sB7-H3) as a biomarker to predict the clinical benefit and/or the occurrence of immune related adverse events (irAEs) in advanced cancer patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs)
Presenter: Luigi Liguori
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
37P - Lymphocyte Subpopulation Balances as a Blood Biomarker for Immune-Related Adverse Events in Patients Receiving Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors
Presenter: Mireille Langouo fontsa
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
38P - Biomarkers predictive of response to immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy in patients with metastatic melanoma
Presenter: Eliza Bob
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
39P - Analysis of the immune response patterns in localized prostate cancer
Presenter: Sara Merler
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
40P - MANIFEST: A Multiomic Profiling Platform for Immuno-Oncology Biomarker Discovery
Presenter: Zayd Tippu
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
41P - Total tumor burden and radiomics to evaluate response in dose escalation studies: Roginolisib (IOA-244), a highly selective PI3Kd inhibitor in metastatic uveal melanoma patients
Presenter: Anna Di Giacomo
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract