Author: Yuen, Kevin C. J.; Mortensen, Michael J.; Azadi, Amir; Fonkem, Ekokobe; Findling, James W.
Title: Rethinking the management of immune checkpoint inhibitorâ€related adrenal insufficiency in cancer patients during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic Cord-id: sn0s2o8t Document date: 2021_3_8
ID: sn0s2o8t
Snippet: INTRODUCTION: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) is currently a major pandemic challenge, and cancer patients are at a heightened risk of severity and mortality from this infection. In recent years, immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) use to treat multiple cancers has increased in oncology, but equally has raised the question of whether ICI therapy and its sideâ€effects is harmful or beneficial during this pandemic. METHODS: A combination of published literature in PubMed between January 2
Document: INTRODUCTION: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) is currently a major pandemic challenge, and cancer patients are at a heightened risk of severity and mortality from this infection. In recent years, immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) use to treat multiple cancers has increased in oncology, but equally has raised the question of whether ICI therapy and its sideâ€effects is harmful or beneficial during this pandemic. METHODS: A combination of published literature in PubMed between January 2010 and December 2020, recommended guidelines in nonâ€cancer patients, and clinical experience was utilized to outline recommendations on glucocorticoid timing and dosing regimens in ICIâ€treated patients presenting with AI during this COVIDâ€19 pandemic. RESULTS: The potential immune interaction between ICIs and COVIDâ€19 require major consideration because these agents act at the intersection between effective cancer immunotherapy and increasing patient susceptibility, severity and complications from the SARSâ€CoVâ€2 sepsis. Furthermore, ICI use can induce autoimmune adrenal insufficiency (AI) that further increases infection susceptibility. Thus, ICIâ€treated cancer patients with AI may be at greater risk of COVIDâ€19 infection. Glucocorticoids are the cornerstone for replacement therapy, and for treatment and mitigation of adrenal crisis and relief of mass effects in ICIâ€related hypophysitis. Highâ€dose glucocorticoids have also been used with cytotoxic chemotherapy as part of cancer treatment, and iatrogenic AI may arise after glucocorticoid discontinuation that increases the risk of adrenal crisis. Furthermore, in patients who develop the “long COVIDâ€19†syndrome, when to discontinue glucocorticoid therapy becomes crucial to avoid unnecessary prolongation of therapy and the development of iatrogenic hypercortisolemia. CONCLUSION: During the COVIDâ€19 pandemic, much of cancer care have been impacted and an important clinical question is how to optimally manage ICIâ€related AI during these unprecedented times. Herein, we suggest practical recommendations on the timing and dosing regimens of glucocorticoids in different clinical scenarios of ICIâ€treated cancer patients presenting with AI during this COVIDâ€19 pandemic.
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