Published in:
26-06-2023 | Hepatitis | Original Research Article
Role of Underlying Liver Pathology in the Development of Immune-Related Hepatitis: A Case–Control Study
Authors:
Erica M. Storm, Dimitrios Makrakis, Genevieve I. Lin, Rafee Talukder, Dimitra R. Bakaloudi, Eshana E. Shah, Iris W. Liou, David Hockenbery, Petros Grivas, Ali Raza Khaki
Published in:
Targeted Oncology
|
Issue 4/2023
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Abstract
Background
Immune-related hepatitis (irH) is a serious immune-related adverse event (IRAE) that may result in morbidity, immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy interruption and, rarely, mortality. The impact of underlying liver pathology, including liver metastasis, on the incidence of irH remains poorly understood.
Objectives
We hypothesized that the presence of underlying liver pathology increased the risk of irH in patients with cancer treated with ICI.
Patients and Methods
We conducted a retrospective case-control study of irH in patients with cancer receiving first ICI treatment from 2016–2020. Provider documented cases of ≥ grade 2 irH were identified and control matched in a 2:1 ratio based on age, sex, time of ICI initiation, and follow-up time. Conditional logistic regression was used to estimate the relationship between irH and liver metastasis at ICI initiation.
Results
Ninety-seven cases of irH were identified, 29% of which had liver metastases at time of ICI initiation. Thirty-eight percent of patients developed grade 2, 47% grade 3, and 14% grade 4 irH. When adjusted for covariates/confounders, the presence of liver metastasis was associated with increased odds of irH (aOR 2.79 95% CI 1.37–5.66, p = 0.005). The presence of liver metastases did not correlate with irH grade or rate of irH recurrence after ICI rechallenge.
Conclusions
Presence of liver metastases increased the odds of irH in patients with first-time ICI therapy. Limitations include the retrospective nature, moderate sample size, possible selection bias and confounding. Our findings are hypothesis-generating and warrant external validation as well as tissue and circulating biomarker exploration.