Cutaneous manifestations induced by check point inhibitors in 120 melanoma patients - The European MelSkinTox study.
J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol 2023. [PMID:
37042810 DOI:
10.1111/jdv.19112]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/29/2022] [Accepted: 03/07/2023] [Indexed: 04/13/2023]
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Checkpoint inhibitors provide an effective approach for the melanoma treatment. They prolong lymphocyte effects, which explains the cytotoxicity underlying immune-related adverse events (IrAEs). Cutaneous IrAEs affect nearly 40% of PD-1i and 50% of CTLA4i treated patients. Severe cutaneous irAE do not often occur but could be life-threatening and may persist despite treatment discontinuation.
METHODS
We aim to investigate cutaneous IrAEs in a cohort of patients treated with ICI across Europe in an effort to characterize the reactions in a real-world, phase IV, post-marketing study using a follow-up questionnaire. Data since November 2016 until March 2021 were obtained from the Melskintox database, a European multicentric biobank dedicated to the follow-up of melanoma and cutaneous adverse events, supported by EADO. The dermatoses reported were pooled into 4 categories: inflammatory dermatosis, bullous diseases, drug-related eruptions and pigmentary diseases.
RESULTS
Inflammatory benign dermatoses (n=63) represented the most common group of reactions (52.5%), followed by drug-related eruptions (n=24, 20%), pigmentary diseases (n=23, 19.2%), and bullous diseases (n=10, 8.3%). Grade II (n=41, 34.2%) are represented by bullous pemphigoid, eczema, hypodermitis, lichenoid eruption, maculo-papular rash, pruritus, psoriasis-like rash, urticarial eruption and vitiligo. Grade III (n=18, 15.0%) are represented by bullous pemphigoid, lichenoid eruption, and rashes. Grade IV (n=2, 1.7%) is only represented by bullous disease. Most cutaneous IrAEs led to immunotherapy continuation (n=95, 88.0%). CR is associated with more severe the cutaneous irAEs. We report an average time-to-onset of 208 days and some late-onset events.
CONCLUSION
Our study has characterized the clinical spectrum of cutaneous irAEs, their timing and severity and their relationship with tumour response. Grade I-II cutaneous IrAE are easily managed allowing ongoing anti-cancer treatment. Severe late-onset cutaneous irAE are not uncommon. A dermatologic follow-up helps mitigate the risk of life-threatening adverse events. These findings highlight the importance of onco-dermatologic involvement in management of patients with melanoma receiving immunotherapy.
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