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Shorter versus longer corticosteroid duration and recurrent immune checkpoint inhibitor-associated AKI

Authors :
Joe-Elie Salem
Enriqueta Felip
Shuchi Anand
Karolina Benesova
Marlies Ostermann
Ala Abudayyeh
Omar Mamlouk
Umut Selamet
Grace Cherry
Sunandana Chandra
Sandra M Herrmann
Maria Jose Soler
Abhijat Kitchlu
Jamie S Lin
Kerry L Reynolds
Elizabeth M Gaughan
Eva Muñoz-Couselo
Jamie S Hirsch
Pablo Garcia
Meghan E Sise
Thibaud Koessler
Mark Eijgelsheim
Shruti Gupta
Frank B Cortazar
Jason M Prosek
Ilya Glezerman
Shveta S Motwani
Naoka Murakami
Rimda Wanchoo
David I Ortiz-Melo
Arash Rashidi
Ben Sprangers
Vikram Aggarwal
A Bilal Malik
Sebastian Loew
Christopher A Carlos
Pazit Beckerman
Zain Mithani
Chintan V Shah
Amanda D Renaghan
Sophie De Seigneux
Luca Campedel
Daniel Sanghoon Shin
Sunil Rangarajan
Priya Deshpande
Gaia Coppock
Marium Husain
Clara Garcia-Carro
Sheila Bermejo
Nuttha Lumlertgul
Nina Seylanova
Busra Isik
Aydin Kaghazchi
Yuriy Khanin
Sheru K Kansal
Kai M Schmidt-Ott
Raymond K Hsu
Maria C Tio
Harkarandeep Singh
Kenar D Jhaveri
David E Leaf
Corinne Isnard Bagnis
Suraj S Mothi
Weiting Chang
Vipulbhai Sakhiya
Daniel Stalbow
Sylvia Wu
Armando Cennamo
Anne Rigg
Nisha Shaunak
Zoe A Kibbelaar
Harish S Seethapathy
Meghan Lee
Ian A Strohbhen
Ilya G Glezerman
Dwight H Owen
Sharon Mini
Andrey Kisel
Nicole Albert
Katherine Carter
Vicki Donley
Tricia Young
Heather Cigoi
Els Wauters Ben Sprangers
Javier A Pagan
Jonathan J Hogan
Valda Page
Samuel AP Short
Maria Josep Carreras
Sethu M. Madhavan
Source :
Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer, Vol 10, Iss 9 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2022.

Abstract

Background Corticosteroids are the mainstay of treatment for immune checkpoint inhibitor-associated acute kidney injury (ICPi-AKI), but the optimal duration of therapy has not been established. Prolonged use of corticosteroids can cause numerous adverse effects and may decrease progression-free survival among patients treated with ICPis. We sought to determine whether a shorter duration of corticosteroids was equally efficacious and safe as compared with a longer duration.Methods We used data from an international multicenter cohort study of patients diagnosed with ICPi-AKI from 29 centers across nine countries. We examined whether a shorter duration of corticosteroids (28 days or less) was associated with a higher rate of recurrent ICPi-AKI or death within 30 days following completion of corticosteroid treatment as compared with a longer duration (29–84 days).Results Of 165 patients treated with corticosteroids, 56 (34%) received a shorter duration of treatment and 109 (66%) received a longer duration. Patients in the shorter versus longer duration groups were similar with respect to baseline and ICPi-AKI characteristics. Five of 56 patients (8.9%) in the shorter duration group and 12 of 109 (11%) in the longer duration group developed recurrent ICPi-AKI or died (p=0.90). Nadir serum creatinine in the first 14, 28, and 90 days following completion of corticosteroid treatment was similar between groups (p=0.40, p=0.56, and p=0.89, respectively).Conclusion A shorter duration of corticosteroids (28 days or less) may be safe for patients with ICPi-AKI. However, the findings may be susceptible to unmeasured confounding and further research from randomized clinical trials is needed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20511426
Volume :
10
Issue :
9
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6f6e1b57fb14e89bf208b6a482d2a1a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2022-005646