PD-1 inhibitor-induced rheumatic, endocrine, and sarcoidosis-like immune-related adverse events in metastatic melanoma are associated with improved survival and lower corticosteroid exposure
Maria Lindén, Hifaa Al Remawi, Anna Fager, Levent M Akyürek, Anna Rudin, Lars Ny, Sara Bjursten, Ankur Pandita, Max Levin

TL;DR
Certain immune-related side effects from PD-1 inhibitors in melanoma patients are linked to better survival and less corticosteroid use.
Contribution
Identifies specific immune-related adverse events associated with improved survival and lower corticosteroid exposure in melanoma patients.
Findings
Rheumatic, endocrine, and sarcoidosis-like irAEs are associated with improved survival.
Lower corticosteroid doses are used for survival-associated irAEs.
Colitis and hypophysitis irAEs show borderline or excellent outcomes despite being rare.
Abstract
Programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) inhibitors improve survival in advanced melanoma but can induce immune-related adverse events (irAEs). IrAEs have been linked to better outcomes. However, it remains unclear whether specific irAE types drive this effect and how corticosteroid treatment of irAEs influences survival. A seven-year retrospective cohort study of 301 patients with advanced cutaneous melanoma treated with single-agent PD-1 inhibition at Sahlgrenska University Hospital. irAEs were identified using CTCAE v4.0/v5.0, and irAEs requiring systemic corticosteroids or endocrine replacement therapy were included. Corticosteroid therapy was categorized as low dose (≤0.5 mg/kg prednisolone equivalent) or high dose (>0.5 mg/kg). Overall survival (OS) was assessed using Kaplan–Meier and Cox models, including time-dependent analyses to address immortal time bias. Patients with irAE…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers · Melanoma and MAPK Pathways · Cutaneous Melanoma Detection and Management
