Anas Zaher 1, Maria Julia Moura Nascimento Santos 2, Hassan Elsaygh 3, Stephen J Peterson 1, Carolina Colli Cruz 2, Anusha Shirwaikar Thomas 2, Yinghong Wang 2
Tag: immune checkpoint inhibitors
Scientific corner
Management of refractory checkpoint inhibitor-induced colitis
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40251944/
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14740338.2025.2496431
Expert Opin Drug Saf. 2025 Apr 21:1-10. doi: 10.1080/14740338.2025.2496431. Online ahead of print.
Introduction: This review discusses the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and factors associated with refractory immune-mediated diarrhea and colitis (r-IMDC), emphasizing tailored treatment strategies.
Areas covered: The current literature on r-IMDC was reviewed using PubMed (2015-2025), focusing on clinical trials, meta-analyses, and case reports relevant to its management.
Expert opinion: Effectively managing r-IMDC is crucial for balancing toxicities and antitumor response. Available second and third-line management options for r-IMDC cases must be carefully evaluated. Future perspectives include development of standardized protocols beyond second-line therapies and predictive biomarkers to enable personalized treatment.
- ICIs are essential in cancer therapy but often cause IMDC, with up to 41% of patients developing steroid-refractory cases.
- Current guideline-recommended second-line therapies, such as infliximab and vedolizumab, fail in 11% of IMDC cases, underscoring the need for third-line interventions.
- Emerging therapies, including Janus kinase inhibitors, fecal microbiota transplantation, and interleukin-targeting agents, show promise for r-IMDC management. Also gma, IVIG.
- Personalized management strategies, incorporating gut microbiota modulation and targeted immune suppression, could improve outcomes in refractory colitis.
- Effective management of r-IMDC is critical for reducing prolonged immunosuppression, minimizing cancer treatment interruptions, and improving patient quality of life.
Scientific corner
Dictionary of immune responses to cytokines at single-cell resolution
Dictionary of immune responses to cytokines at single-cell resolution – PubMed
Dictionary of immune responses to cytokines at single-cell resolution | Nature
Ang Cui 1 2 3, Teddy Huang 4, Shuqiang Li 5 4, Aileen Ma 5 6, Jorge L Pérez 5 6, Chris Sander 5 7 8, Derin B Keskin 5 4 9, Catherine J Wu 5 9 10, Ernest Fraenkel 5 11, Nir Hacohen 12 13 14
Nature 2024 Jan;625(7994):377-384. doi: 10.1038/s41586-023-06816-9. Epub 2023 Dec 6.
Cytokines mediate cell-cell communication in the immune system and represent important therapeutic targets1-3. A myriad of studies have highlighted their central role in immune function4-13, yet we lack a global view of the cellular responses of each immune cell type to each cytokine. To address this gap, we created the Immune Dictionary, a compendium of single-cell transcriptomic profiles of more than 17 immune cell types in response to each of 86 cytokines (>1,400 cytokine-cell type combinations) in mouse lymph nodes in vivo. A cytokine-centric view of the dictionary revealed that most cytokines induce highly cell-type-specific responses. For example, the inflammatory cytokine interleukin-1β induces distinct gene programmes in almost every cell type. A cell-type-centric view of the dictionary identified more than 66 cytokine-driven cellular polarization states across immune cell types, including previously uncharacterized states such as an interleukin-18-induced polyfunctional natural killer cell state. Based on this dictionary, we developed companion software, Immune Response Enrichment Analysis, for assessing cytokine activities and immune cell polarization from gene expression data, and applied it to reveal cytokine networks in tumours following immune checkpoint blockade therapy. Our dictionary generates new hypotheses for cytokine functions, illuminates pleiotropic effects of cytokines, expands our knowledge of activation states of each immune cell type, and provides a framework to deduce the roles of specific cytokines and cell-cell communication networks in any immune response.
Scientific corner
A case of refractory immune checkpoint inhibitor-induced colitis improved by the treatment with vedolizumab and granulocyte-monocyte apheresis combination therapy
Hikaru Ishihara 1, Tatsuyuki Watanabe 2, Shinsuke Kumei 2, Keiichiro Kume 2, Ichiro Yoshikawa 2, Masaru Harada 2 Clin J Gastroenterol. 2023 Dec 2. doi: 10.1007/s12328-023-01887-7.
A 68-year-old man developed immune-related adverse event (irAE) colitis after the initiation of nivolumab and ipilimumab combination therapy for malignant melanoma. We diagnosed the patient with grade 3 irAE colitis and started prednisolone (1 mg/kg/day). Although the symptom improved once, it worsened along with the tapering of prednisolone. Therefore, we started infliximab (IFX). However, symptoms did not improve after two doses of IFX. We discontinued IFX and initiated vedolizumab (VED). Because VED alone did not improve the symptom, we started granulocyte-monocyte apheresis (GMA). Twelve weeks after the onset, the colitis was in remission. Therefore, in addition to vedolizumab, GMA may be considered in cases refractory to treatment.
Scientific corner
Severe and refractory gastrointestinal toxicity due to immune checkpoint inhibitors: clinical experience in a tertiary referral hospital
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37170542/
https://www.reed.es/ArticuloFicha.aspx?id=12705&hst=0&idR=125&tp=1
Elena Céspedes Martínez, Virginia Robles Alonso, Claudia Herrera-De Guise, Luis Mayorga, Francesc Casellas, María Roca-Herrera, Natalia Borruel, Rev Esp Enferm Dig 2023;115(10):567-573
Introduction: immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) are increasingly used to treat several types of cancer. These drugs lead to a wide range of toxicities. Immune-related gastrointestinal adverse events are common and potentially severe. In this manuscript, we recount the real clinical experience in a tertiary center. Methods: a retrospective and observational study was conducted in adult patients under ICI treatment. Included patients had been referred to the Gastrointestinal Service of Hospital Universitario Vall d’Hebron for evaluation of severe toxicities, from January 2017 to January 2020, for whom the clinical, epidemiological and evolutive data were collected. Results: a total of 18 patients were included. Fifty-five percent received anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1)/anti-programmed death-ligand 1 (anti PD-L1), 11 % received anti-cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA-4) and 33 % received both treatments. The toxicities were manifested as enterocolitis, microscopic colitis and gastritis. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy was performed in seven patients; all were proved to have histological changes on duodenum biopsies. Treatment was stopped in all patients and steroids were initiated. Sixty-six per cent achieved clinical remission with steroids. Five patients received anti-TNF treatment (infliximab). Only one of the five had responded. Two anti-TNF refractory patients received ustekinumab, with an appropriate clinical response. One patient received apheresis granulocyte as concomitant treatment. A patient with a steroid-dependent course started vedolizumab. Three patients had other immune-related adverse events. Conclusion: gastrointestinal immune-related adverse events are acquiring a higher profile in daily practice and gastroenterologists play an even greater role in the management of these patients.
Scientific corner
Granulocyte Apheresis: Can It Be Associated with Anti PD-1 Therapy for Melanoma?
Alvise Sernicola 1,Anna Colpo 2,Anca Irina Leahu 2 and Mauro Alaibac 1Medicina 2022, 58(10), 1398; https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina58101398
In the field of advanced melanoma, there is an urgent need to investigate novel approaches targeting specific components of the cancer–immunity cycle beyond immune checkpoint inhibitors. The authors reviewed the basic understanding of the role of neutrophils in cancer biology, and the latest clinical evidence supporting the correlation between cancer-associated neutrophils and the prognosis and response to the immunotherapy of advanced melanoma. Finally, they propose that granulocyte and monocyte apheresis, an emerging non-pharmacological treatment in current dermatology, could become an investigative treatment targeting melanoma-associated neutrophils which could be potentially used in combination with the usual immune checkpoint inhibitors.
Contact UsFor more information
Contact Us