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P298 Checkpoint inhibitor colitis: insights from bench and bedside

Authors :
Marta Jagielowicz
Mark R. Middleton
Vincent Cheung
Mark Tuthill
Punir Pirmohammed
Andrew Protheroe
Hashem Koohy
Oliver Brain
Kaushal Parikh
Benjamin P. Fairfax
Miranda Payne
Hannah Chen
Sreedhar Subramanian
Ana Sousa Geros
Elena Collantes
Anna Aulicino
Tarun Gupta
Jonathan Heseltine
Eve Fryer
Alison Simmons
Meenali Chitnis
Joseph J. Sacco
Anna Olsson-Brown
Agne Antanaviciute
Source :
Posters.
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Society of Gastroenterology, 2021.

Abstract

Aims Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) is the mainstay of treatment for metastatic melanoma and lung adenocarcinoma, and their use is growing in cancer. Immune checkpoint blockade induced colitis (ICB colitis) presents a management challenge and its mechanisms remain poorly elucidated. Methods We performed next generation single-cell RNA sequencing of immune cells from patients given ICB. We validated findings using confocal microscopy, drawing comparisons bioinformatically with ulcerative colitis. In parallel, we conducted a review of 1,074 patients given checkpoint inhibitors across two tertiary centres between 2011–2018 to discover patterns in incidence and predictors of clinical outcome. Results Using single-cell RNA sequencing, we discovered excessive local CD8 T cell proliferation was a key feature of ICB colitis, and we were able to visualise higher numbers of replicating CD8 T cells in gut tissue sections of patients with colitis than those without ICB colitis. The degree of replication was greater than seen in ulcerative colitis by bioinformatic analysis. From our clinical review, age, gender and smoking status did not alter the risk of developing colitis, whereas type of immunotherapy did (incidence 9% in PD-1 Monotherapy vs 32% Combination Therapy). Having prior IBD did not guarantee the development of ICB Colitis. Systemic markers of inflammation (C-Reactive Protein, Albumin) did not predict outcome, whereas local markers of inflammation (endoscopic UCEIS scoring, histological Nancy Index) did. Conclusions We putatively link novel insights from bench science to clinical trends. ICB colitis may be driven more by a gut localised inflammation response in comparison to ulcerative colitis. As we also demonstrate, this may explain why endoscopic and histological scoring may have better prognostic value than systemic measures of inflammation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Posters
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........400449b0072b3640c7db2a229f942beb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2020-bsgcampus.372