Shorter versus longer corticosteroid duration and recurrent immune checkpoint inhibitor-associated AKI Journal Article


Authors: Gupta, S.; Garcia-Carro, C.; Prosek, J. M.; Glezerman, I.; Herrmann, S. M.; Garcia, P.; Abudayyeh, A.; Lumlertgul, N.; Malik, A. B.; Loew, S.; Beckerman, P.; Renaghan, A. D.; Carlos, C. A.; Rashidi, A.; Mithani, Z.; Deshpande, P.; Rangarajan, S.; Shah, C. V.; Seigneux, S.; Campedel, L.; Kitchlu, A.; Shin, D. S.; Coppock, G.; Ortiz-Melo, D. I.; Sprangers, B.; Aggarwal, V.; Benesova, K.; Wanchoo, R.; Murakami, N.; Cortazar, F. B.; Reynolds, K. L.; Sise, M. E.; Soler, M. J.; Leaf, D. E.; ICPi-AKI Consortium
Article Title: Shorter versus longer corticosteroid duration and recurrent immune checkpoint inhibitor-associated AKI
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Corticosteroids are the mainstay of treatment for immune checkpoint inhibitor-associated acute kidney injury (ICPi-AKI), but the optimal duration of therapy has not been established. Prolonged use of corticosteroids can cause numerous adverse effects and may decrease progression-free survival among patients treated with ICPis. We sought to determine whether a shorter duration of corticosteroids was equally efficacious and safe as compared with a longer duration. METHODS: We used data from an international multicenter cohort study of patients diagnosed with ICPi-AKI from 29 centers across nine countries. We examined whether a shorter duration of corticosteroids (28 days or less) was associated with a higher rate of recurrent ICPi-AKI or death within 30 days following completion of corticosteroid treatment as compared with a longer duration (29-84 days). RESULTS: Of 165 patients treated with corticosteroids, 56 (34%) received a shorter duration of treatment and 109 (66%) received a longer duration. Patients in the shorter versus longer duration groups were similar with respect to baseline and ICPi-AKI characteristics. Five of 56 patients (8.9%) in the shorter duration group and 12 of 109 (11%) in the longer duration group developed recurrent ICPi-AKI or died (p=0.90). Nadir serum creatinine in the first 14, 28, and 90 days following completion of corticosteroid treatment was similar between groups (p=0.40, p=0.56, and p=0.89, respectively). CONCLUSION: A shorter duration of corticosteroids (28 days or less) may be safe for patients with ICPi-AKI. However, the findings may be susceptible to unmeasured confounding and further research from randomized clinical trials is needed. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
Keywords: immunotherapy
Journal Title: Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer
Volume: 10
Issue: 9
ISSN: 2051-1426
Publisher: Biomed Central Ltd  
Date Published: 2022-09-01
Start Page: e005646
Language: English
DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2022-005646
PUBMED: 36137651
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC9511654
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 3 October 2022 -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors