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A multi-center study on safety and efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors in cancer patients with kidney transplant

Authors :
Itunu Owoyemi
Ala Abudayyeh
Zain Mithani
F. Stephen Hodi
Melissa J. Danesh
Francesc Moreso
Edgar A. Jaimes
Reed E. Drews
Glenn J. Hanna
Gabriel M. Danovitch
Francesca Cardarelli
Osama E. Rahma
Naoka Murakami
Andrew D. Santeusanio
Pascale Khairallah
Madhav C. Menon
Victoria Gutgarts
Patrick M. Mulvaney
María José Soler
Ben Sprangers
Scott G. Westphal
David E. Leaf
Meghan E. Sise
Suraj Sarvode Mothi
Shana Machado
Leonardo V. Riella
Jennifer L Swank
Patrick A. Ott
Aleksandra Kukla
Song Ong
Shayan Shirazian
Shruti Gupta
Kenar D. Jhaveri
Sandra Carias Zuniga
David I. Ortiz-Melo
Rimda Wanchoo
Keisuke Shirai
Roslyn B. Mannon
Christopher D. Blosser
Erik L. Lum
Claude Bassil
Abhijat Kitchlu
Samir Husami
Craig Devoe
Tarek Alhamad
Maen Abdelrahim
Noha Abdel-Wahab
Vinay Nair
Chrysalyne D. Schmults
Adi Diab
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2021.

Abstract

Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are widely used for various malignancies. However, their safety and efficacy in patients with a kidney transplant have not been defined. To delineate this, we conducted a multicenter retrospective study of 69 patients with a kidney transplant receiving ICIs between January 2010 and May 2020. For safety, we assessed the incidence, timing, and risk factors of acute graft rejection. For efficacy, objective response rate and overall survival were assessed in cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma and melanoma, the most common cancers in our cohort, and compared with stage-matched 23 patients with squamous cell carcinoma and 14 with melanoma with a kidney transplant not receiving ICIs. Following ICI treatment, 29 out of 69 (42%) patients developed acute rejection, 19 of whom lost their allograft, compared with an acute rejection rate of 5.4% in the non-ICI cohort. Median time from ICI initiation to rejection was 24 days. Factors associated with a lower risk of rejection were mTOR inhibitor use (odds ratio 0.26; 95% confidence interval, 0.09-0.72) and triple-agent immunosuppression (0.67, 0.48-0.92). The objective response ratio was 36.4% and 40% in the squamous cell carcinoma and melanoma subgroups, respectively. In the squamous cell carcinoma subgroup, overall survival was significantly longer in patients treated with ICIs (median overall survival 19.8 months vs. 10.6 months), whereas in the melanoma subgroup, overall survival did not differ between groups. Thus, ICIs were associated with a high risk of rejection in patients with kidney transplants but may lead to improved cancer outcomes. Prospective studies are needed to determine optimal immunosuppression strategies to improve patient outcomes. ispartof: KIDNEY INTERNATIONAL vol:100 issue:1 pages:196-205 ispartof: location:United States status: published

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....53f7b9e45e992ec1c8b0ca6f347fda02