1. Long-term complete remission after severe pembrolizumab-induced immune-related encephalitis in metastatic lung adeno-squamous carcinoma: A case report
- Author
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Rémy Quirynen, Sebahat Ocak, Fabrice Duplaquet, and Lionel Pirard
- Subjects
Non-small-cell lung cancer ,Immune checkpoint inhibitor ,Immune-mediated neurological adverse event ,Complete remission ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Immune checkpoint inhibitors became the treatment of choice, in monotherapy or in association with platinum-based doublet chemotherapy, in first-line therapy for advanced-stage non-small-cell lung cancer without oncogenic driver. Nevertheless, it can be associated with diverse immune-related adverse events; several immune-related adverse events can also follow each other involving multiple organ systems, leading to immune checkpoint inhibitors discontinuation and immunosuppressive therapy that could compromise the prognosis of patients, with the exception of rare situations such as this clinical case.This case report illustrates a succession of immune-related adverse events including a rare and severe pembrolizumab-induced immune-related encephalitis in a patient with metastatic lung adeno-squamous carcinoma in whom we could observe a long-term and complete remission despite discontinuation of treatment and high-dose corticosteroids.In metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer, a disease with a poor initial prognosis, some patients can benefit from immune checkpoint inhibitors and can even now present a long-term and complete remission and this despite severe and rare immune-related adverse events, high-dose corticosteroids and an early discontinuation of treatment.
- Published
- 2023
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