Conference Coverage

Hold the checkpoint inhibitors when pneumonitis symptoms occur


 

AT AACR–NCI–EORTC

References

In rare instances, patients may required other immunosuppressive agents, such as infliximab (Remicade), cyclophosphamide, or mycophenolate mofetil.

Patients who require additional immunosuppressive agents to resolve severe pneumonitis tend to have poor outcomes, Dr. Gettinger said.

Re-challenge of patients with a PD-1 or PD-L1 inhibitor following resolution of pneumonitis appears to be inadvisable for all patients except possibly those with grade 1 (asymptomatic) toxicity, due to the high risk of recurrence, he said.

Pages

Recommended Reading

New cancer cases to reach nearly 2.4 million in 2035 – AACR
MDedge Family Medicine
Clinical advances drive lung cancer staging, classification changes
MDedge Family Medicine
MAPS: Bevacizumab prolongs survival in mesothelioma
MDedge Family Medicine
Recent quitters win big in lung screening trials
MDedge Family Medicine
Meta-analysis confirms no OS benefit from antiangiogenics for NSCLC patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Actionable mutations are highly prevalent in young lung cancer patients
MDedge Family Medicine
ESC: Heart failure patients have increased cancer incidence
MDedge Family Medicine
Commentary: Red meat and cancer risk – what your patients should know
MDedge Family Medicine
Experimental LOXO-101 induces regression in several hard-to-treat cancers
MDedge Family Medicine
Immune-related events with checkpoint inhibitors are manageable
MDedge Family Medicine