1. COVID-19 lung injury as a primer for immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs)-related pneumonia in a patient affected by squamous head and neck carcinoma treated with PD-L1 blockade: a case report
- Author
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Angelo Dipasquale, Elena Lorenzi, Daoud Rahal, Armando Santoro, Pasquale Persico, and Matteo Simonelli
- Subjects
Male ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,Lung Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Case Report ,B7-H1 Antigen ,Nasopharynx ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors ,RC254-282 ,Screening procedures ,clinical trials as topic ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Lung Injury ,2518 1619 ,Molecular Medicine ,Immunotherapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Immunology ,therapies ,investigational ,Lung injury ,programmed cell death 1 receptor ,Diagnosis, Differential ,head and neck neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Adverse effect ,Pandemics ,Aged ,Pneumonitis ,Pharmacology ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck ,business.industry ,Head and neck cancer ,COVID-19 ,Correction ,Pneumonia ,medicine.disease ,COVID-19 Drug Treatment ,Differential diagnosis ,business - Abstract
By the beginning of the global pandemic, SARS-CoV-2 infection has dramatically impacted on oncology daily practice. In the current oncological landscape, where immunotherapy has revolutionized the treatment of several malignancies, distinguishing between COVID-19 and immune-mediated pneumonitis can be hard because of shared clinical, radiological and pathological features. Indeed, their common mechanism of aberrant inflammation could lead to a mutual and amplifying interaction.We describe the case of a 65–year-old patient affected by metastatic squamous head and neck cancer and candidate to an experimental therapy including an anti-PD-L1 agent. COVID-19 ground-glass opacities under resolution were an incidental finding during screening procedures and worsened after starting immunotherapy. The diagnostic work-up was consistent with ICIs-related pneumonia and it is conceivable that lung injury by SARS-CoV-2 has acted as an inflammatory primer for the development of the immune-related adverse event.Patients recovered from COVID-19 starting ICIs could be at greater risk of recall immune-mediated pneumonitis. Nasopharyngeal swab and chest CT scan are recommended before starting immunotherapy. The awareness of the phenomenon could allow an easier interpretation of radiological changes under treatment and a faster diagnostic work-up to resume ICIs. In the presence of clinical benefit, for asymptomatic ICIs-related pneumonia a watchful-waiting approach and immunotherapy prosecution are suggested.
- Published
- 2021
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