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Observational Study
. 2018 Dec;19(12):1579-1589.
doi: 10.1016/S1470-2045(18)30608-9. Epub 2018 Nov 12.

Cardiovascular toxicities associated with immune checkpoint inhibitors: an observational, retrospective, pharmacovigilance study

Affiliations
Observational Study

Cardiovascular toxicities associated with immune checkpoint inhibitors: an observational, retrospective, pharmacovigilance study

Joe-Elie Salem et al. Lancet Oncol. 2018 Dec.

Abstract

Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have substantially improved clinical outcomes in multiple cancer types and are increasingly being used in early disease settings and in combinations of different immunotherapies. However, ICIs can also cause severe or fatal immune-related adverse-events (irAEs). We aimed to identify and characterise cardiovascular irAEs that are significantly associated with ICIs.

Methods: In this observational, retrospective, pharmacovigilance study, we used VigiBase, WHO's global database of individual case safety reports, to compare cardiovascular adverse event reporting in patients who received ICIs (ICI subgroup) with this reporting in the full database. This study included all cardiovascular irAEs classified by group queries according to the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities, between inception on Nov 14, 1967, and Jan 2, 2018. We evaluated the association between ICIs and cardiovascular adverse events using the reporting odds ratio (ROR) and the information component (IC). IC is an indicator value for disproportionate Bayesian reporting that compares observed and expected values to find associations between drugs and adverse events. IC025 is the lower end of the IC 95% credibility interval, and an IC025 value of more than zero is deemed significant. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT03387540.

Findings: We identified 31 321 adverse events reported in patients who received ICIs and 16 343 451 adverse events reported in patients treated with any drugs (full database) in VigiBase. Compared with the full database, ICI treatment was associated with higher reporting of myocarditis (5515 reports for the full database vs 122 for ICIs, ROR 11·21 [95% CI 9·36-13·43]; IC025 3·20), pericardial diseases (12 800 vs 95, 3·80 [3·08-4·62]; IC025 1·63), and vasculitis (33 289 vs 82, 1·56 [1·25-1·94]; IC025 0·03), including temporal arteritis (696 vs 18, 12·99 [8·12-20·77]; IC025 2·59) and polymyalgia rheumatica (1709 vs 16, 5·13 [3·13-8·40]; IC025 1·33). Pericardial diseases were reported more often in patients with lung cancer (49 [56%] of 87 patients), whereas myocarditis (42 [41%] of 103 patients) and vasculitis (42 [60%] of 70 patients) were more commonly reported in patients with melanoma (χ2 test for overall subgroup comparison, p<0·0001). Vision was impaired in five (28%) of 18 patients with temporal arteritis. Cardiovascular irAEs were severe in the majority of cases (>80%), with death occurring in 61 (50%) of 122 myocarditis cases, 20 (21%) of 95 pericardial disease cases, and five (6%) of 82 vasculitis cases (χ2 test for overall comparison between pericardial diseases, myocarditis, and vasculitis, p<0·0001).

Interpretation: Treatment with ICIs can lead to severe and disabling inflammatory cardiovascular irAEs soon after commencement of therapy. In addition to life-threatening myocarditis, these toxicities include pericardial diseases and temporal arteritis with a risk of blindness. These events should be considered in patient care and in combination clinical trial designs (ie, combinations of different immunotherapies as well as immunotherapies and chemotherapy).

Funding: The Cancer Institut Thématique Multi-Organisme of the French National Alliance for Life and Health Sciences (AVIESAN) Plan Cancer 2014-2019; US National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health; the James C. Bradford Jr. Melanoma Fund; and the Melanoma Research Foundation.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflicts of interest: JMB has a patent Prediction of PD-1 outcome by HLA-DR expression pending. DBJ reports personal fees from Array Biopharma, grants and personal fees from Incyte, grants and personal fees from BMS, personal fees from Merck, outside the submitted work. MPB reports grants from Pfizer, grants and personal fees from AstraZeneca, grants and personal fees from Merck, grants and personal fees from Amgen, grants from MedImmune, personal fees from Bayer, personal fees from Janssen, outside the submitted work. JPS reports personal fees from Roche, personal fees from MSD, personal fees from BMS, personal fees from AztraZeneca, personal fees from Pfizer, outside the submitted work. AG reports personal fees from PFIZER, outside the submitted work. JJM reports grants and other from Pfizer, grants and other from Bristol Myers Squibb, other from Novartis, other from Regeneron, other from Myokardia, other from Ipsen, other from Takeda, outside the submitted work. The other authors have no conflict of interest. We would like to thank the custom searches team at UMC research section, without whom this study would not have been possible.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Information component (IC) and its 95% credibility interval (error bar, IC025 and IC975) over time for myocarditis (A), pericardial disorders (B), temporal arteritis (C), and polymyalgia rheumatica (D). Lower end of IC 95% credibility interval >0 is considered significant.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Overlap (A) and time to event onset (B) for selected ICI immune related cardiovascular adverse events (CV-irAE: myocarditis, pericardial disorders and vasculitis) in individual case safety reports from VigiBase (last accessed: 01/2018).

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