Phenotypic Differences in Thyroid Immune Related Adverse Events Following Treatment With Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors — Christopher A. Muir (2021) | RDL Network
Phenotypic Differences in Thyroid Immune Related Adverse Events Following Treatment With Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors
Article 2021 en
Authors
CM
Christopher A. Muir
AM
Alexander M. Menzies
RC
Roderick Clifton‐Bligh
Abstract
2 min read
Abstract Background: Thyroid toxicity is common following immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) treatment. Published studies estimate the incidence at 10-20%, although rates vary widely between different ICIs. The etiology of ICI-associated thyroid immune related adverse events (irAEs) is unknown & not all patients develop a classic thyroiditis-like presentation of transient hyperthyroidism followed by a hypothyroid phase. Only small observational cohorts have been reported & the clinical & biochemical features of thyroid irAEs have not been well characterized. The current study aimed to describe thyroid irAEs in a large cohort of patients with melanoma. Methods: We reviewed outcomes in a prospective cohort of adult patients undergoing ICI treatment for advanced melanoma. Thyroid function was measured at baseline & at regular intervals during treatment. Thyroid irAEs were defined as new biochemical thyroid dysfunction developing over the course of routine follow-up. Results: Thyroid irAEs occurred in 518 of 1246 (42%) patients. Median follow-up was 11.3 months. Multiple patterns of thyroid-irAEs were observed, such as hyperthyroidism (subclinical or overt) in 31%, hypothyroidism in 8%, & euthyroid hyperthyroxinemia, hypothyroxinemia & isolated low FT3 syndrome each in 1% of participants. Thyroid irAEs were more frequent following combination (CTLA-4 + PD-1) ICI treatment (56%) than following PD-1 (38%) or CTLA-4 (25%) based monotherapies (p=0.001). The severity of thyroid irAEs differed by ICI, with higher rates of overt (vs. subclinical) thyroid dysfunction following combination ICI treatment (47%) relative to PD-1 (37%) & CTLA-4 (19%) monotherapies (p=0.001). Younger age (OR 0.88 per 10-yrs; 95% CI 0.81-0.96), female sex (OR 1.62; 95% CI 1.27-2.08) & combination ICI-treatment (vs. CTLA-4, OR 3.76, 95% CI 2.49-5.75; vs. PD-1, OR 1.90, 95% CI 1.45-2.49) were associated with higher odds of thyroid irAE. Time to onset of thyroid dysfunction was shorter in patients with overt hyperthyroidism relative to other types of thyroid irAE (log rank p=0.001). Overt hyperthyroidism was associated with increased irAEs in other organ systems (colitis, hepatitis, etc), increased irAE severity & increased multi-system irAEs than euthyroid patients or patients with other subtypes of thyroid irAE (p=0.003). Overt hyperthyroidism was also associated with improved progression free survival (HR 0.57; 95% CI 0.39-0.84; p=0.005) & overall survival (HR 0.68; 95% CI 0.49-0.94; p=0.02). No benefit to cancer survival was observed with other thyroid irAE subtypes. Conclusions: Thyroid irAEs were common. Combination ICI treatment resulted in more frequent, more severe, & earlier onset thyroid irAEs. Of thyroid irAE subtypes, overt hyperthyroidism was uniquely associated with increased immune responsiveness, as evidenced by higher incidence of extra-thyroidal irAEs & improvements in cancer survival.
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