Colitis is unfortunately a fairly common, and sometimes persistent, side effect folks treated with immunotherapy deal with. This may be helpful to those with symptoms who keep getting told their bowel "looks fine"!!!
Five-year review of corticosteroid duration and complications in the management of immune checkpoint inhibitor-related diarrhoea and colitis in advanced melanoma. Favara, Au, Clark, et al. ESMO Open. July 2020.
Late addition. Not really news, but ~
Workup and Management of Immune-Mediated Colitis in Patients Treated with Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors. Singh, Marshall, He. Oncologist. 2020 Mar;25.
As the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors for several different malignancies becomes more mainstream, their side-effect profile raises new challenges. In 2011, the Food and Drug Administration approved the first checkpoint inhibitor for the treatment of advanced melanoma, and since then, checkpoint inhibitors have demonstrated efficacy in many other tumor types. Given the frequent use of immune checkpoint inhibitors in a wide range of cancers today, the diagnosis and management of their immune-mediated toxicities need special attention. One of the most common is immune-mediated colitis. Workup and management of immune-mediated colitis can be challenging and is the purpose of this review. KEY POINTS: Rate of immune mediated colitis differ from different kind of immune checkpoint inhibitor treatment. To work up immune-mediated colitis, tests to rule out infectious etiologies of diarrhea, colonoscopy and abdominal image will help to differentiate immune mediated colitis from colitis from other etiology. Patients with mild colitis can be managed with supportive therapies alone, but more severe cases may require immunomodulators such as steroid. Refractory cases may require tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors, such as infliximab in addition to steroid treatment.
- c
Interesting, thank you! We’ll be sending this to D’s gastroenterologist as well.
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