JAK inhibitor for the treatment of steroid refractory and life-threatening immune-related adverse events secondary to immune checkpoint inhibitors
2643Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) boost anti-tumor immune responses but carry the risk of off-target effects, manifesting as immune-related adverse events (irAEs). Approximately 20% of irAEs are refractory to steroids, requiring subsequent immunosuppressive therapies, while a small...
Saved in:
Published in | Journal of clinical oncology Vol. 43; no. 16_suppl; p. 2643 |
---|---|
Main Authors | , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
American Society of Clinical Oncology
01.06.2025
|
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 0732-183X 1527-7755 |
DOI | 10.1200/JCO.2025.43.16_suppl.2643 |
Cover
Abstract | 2643Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) boost anti-tumor immune responses but carry the risk of off-target effects, manifesting as immune-related adverse events (irAEs). Approximately 20% of irAEs are refractory to steroids, requiring subsequent immunosuppressive therapies, while a smaller subset presents with fulminant reactions requiring multiple agents simultaneously. Although biologics like TNF and IL-6 inhibitors are often used, their targeting of single inflammatory pathways may be insufficient to resolve irAEs in these critical scenarios. We conducted a prospective study to assess the safety and efficacy of oral JAK inhibitors, molecules capable of rapidly modulating multiple inflammatory cytokine signals, in managing steroid-refractory or life-threatening irAEs. Methods: The MIRAE Biobank is a prospective cohort study of cancer patients treated with ICI at the Jewish General Hospital in Montreal, Canada. Patients with steroid refractory subjects with grade > 3 irAE or persistent grade 2 toxicity despite optimal therapy, as well as life-threatening irAEs in the first-line setting treated with JAK inhibitors were extracted from the database and their clinical data was summarized. Among those who survived at least 30 days post-JAK inhibitor, we compared characteristics of responders and non-responders. Responders were defined as resolution of the irAE to grade < 1 and < 10mg prednisone equivalents without any relapses during a 30-day period. Results: In this series, 29 patients were treated with JAK inhibitors for refractory or life-threatening irAEs. Mean age was 69 years, 34.5% were women, 82.8% received anti-programmed cell death protein-1 (PD-1) antibodies alone, and 13.8% patients were treated with the combination of anti-cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen-4 and anti-PD-1 antibodies. Cancer types were primarily melanoma (10, 34.5%) and lung cancer (6, 20.7%). Primary irAEs for which JAK inhibitors were initiated included myocarditis (n=11), colitis (n=4), arthritis (n=4), hepatitis (n=4), encephalitis (n=2), pneumonitis (n=2), myasthenia gravis (n=1) and sicca (n=1). JAK inhibitors were used as second- (refractory to steroids alone), third- or fourth- or more line in 9, 11 and 9 patients, respectively. Median duration of JAK inhibitor exposure was 30.5 days. Among the 24 patients who survived at least 30 days, 17 (71%) responded after a median of 11 days from initiation of the JAK inhibitor. Interestingly, this included 6/8 patients with myocarditis, 4/4 with arthritis and 2/3 with colitis. Of those who responded to JAK inhibitor, 11/18 were steroid refractory and 6/6 were life-threatening cases requiring simultaneous treatment with steroids. Conclusions: This preliminary data suggests that JAK inhibitors may be effective at treating various types of steroid-refractory and life-threatening irAEs. |
---|---|
AbstractList | 2643Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) boost anti-tumor immune responses but carry the risk of off-target effects, manifesting as immune-related adverse events (irAEs). Approximately 20% of irAEs are refractory to steroids, requiring subsequent immunosuppressive therapies, while a smaller subset presents with fulminant reactions requiring multiple agents simultaneously. Although biologics like TNF and IL-6 inhibitors are often used, their targeting of single inflammatory pathways may be insufficient to resolve irAEs in these critical scenarios. We conducted a prospective study to assess the safety and efficacy of oral JAK inhibitors, molecules capable of rapidly modulating multiple inflammatory cytokine signals, in managing steroid-refractory or life-threatening irAEs. Methods: The MIRAE Biobank is a prospective cohort study of cancer patients treated with ICI at the Jewish General Hospital in Montreal, Canada. Patients with steroid refractory subjects with grade > 3 irAE or persistent grade 2 toxicity despite optimal therapy, as well as life-threatening irAEs in the first-line setting treated with JAK inhibitors were extracted from the database and their clinical data was summarized. Among those who survived at least 30 days post-JAK inhibitor, we compared characteristics of responders and non-responders. Responders were defined as resolution of the irAE to grade < 1 and < 10mg prednisone equivalents without any relapses during a 30-day period. Results: In this series, 29 patients were treated with JAK inhibitors for refractory or life-threatening irAEs. Mean age was 69 years, 34.5% were women, 82.8% received anti-programmed cell death protein-1 (PD-1) antibodies alone, and 13.8% patients were treated with the combination of anti-cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen-4 and anti-PD-1 antibodies. Cancer types were primarily melanoma (10, 34.5%) and lung cancer (6, 20.7%). Primary irAEs for which JAK inhibitors were initiated included myocarditis (n=11), colitis (n=4), arthritis (n=4), hepatitis (n=4), encephalitis (n=2), pneumonitis (n=2), myasthenia gravis (n=1) and sicca (n=1). JAK inhibitors were used as second- (refractory to steroids alone), third- or fourth- or more line in 9, 11 and 9 patients, respectively. Median duration of JAK inhibitor exposure was 30.5 days. Among the 24 patients who survived at least 30 days, 17 (71%) responded after a median of 11 days from initiation of the JAK inhibitor. Interestingly, this included 6/8 patients with myocarditis, 4/4 with arthritis and 2/3 with colitis. Of those who responded to JAK inhibitor, 11/18 were steroid refractory and 6/6 were life-threatening cases requiring simultaneous treatment with steroids. Conclusions: This preliminary data suggests that JAK inhibitors may be effective at treating various types of steroid-refractory and life-threatening irAEs. 2643 Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) boost anti-tumor immune responses but carry the risk of off-target effects, manifesting as immune-related adverse events (irAEs). Approximately 20% of irAEs are refractory to steroids, requiring subsequent immunosuppressive therapies, while a smaller subset presents with fulminant reactions requiring multiple agents simultaneously. Although biologics like TNF and IL-6 inhibitors are often used, their targeting of single inflammatory pathways may be insufficient to resolve irAEs in these critical scenarios. We conducted a prospective study to assess the safety and efficacy of oral JAK inhibitors, molecules capable of rapidly modulating multiple inflammatory cytokine signals, in managing steroid-refractory or life-threatening irAEs. Methods: The MIRAE Biobank is a prospective cohort study of cancer patients treated with ICI at the Jewish General Hospital in Montreal, Canada. Patients with steroid refractory subjects with grade > 3 irAE or persistent grade 2 toxicity despite optimal therapy, as well as life-threatening irAEs in the first-line setting treated with JAK inhibitors were extracted from the database and their clinical data was summarized. Among those who survived at least 30 days post-JAK inhibitor, we compared characteristics of responders and non-responders. Responders were defined as resolution of the irAE to grade < 1 and < 10mg prednisone equivalents without any relapses during a 30-day period. Results: In this series, 29 patients were treated with JAK inhibitors for refractory or life-threatening irAEs. Mean age was 69 years, 34.5% were women, 82.8% received anti-programmed cell death protein-1 (PD-1) antibodies alone, and 13.8% patients were treated with the combination of anti-cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen-4 and anti-PD-1 antibodies. Cancer types were primarily melanoma (10, 34.5%) and lung cancer (6, 20.7%). Primary irAEs for which JAK inhibitors were initiated included myocarditis (n=11), colitis (n=4), arthritis (n=4), hepatitis (n=4), encephalitis (n=2), pneumonitis (n=2), myasthenia gravis (n=1) and sicca (n=1). JAK inhibitors were used as second- (refractory to steroids alone), third- or fourth- or more line in 9, 11 and 9 patients, respectively. Median duration of JAK inhibitor exposure was 30.5 days. Among the 24 patients who survived at least 30 days, 17 (71%) responded after a median of 11 days from initiation of the JAK inhibitor. Interestingly, this included 6/8 patients with myocarditis, 4/4 with arthritis and 2/3 with colitis. Of those who responded to JAK inhibitor, 11/18 were steroid refractory and 6/6 were life-threatening cases requiring simultaneous treatment with steroids. Conclusions: This preliminary data suggests that JAK inhibitors may be effective at treating various types of steroid-refractory and life-threatening irAEs. |
Author | Miller, Wilson H. Papadopoulos, Theodore Hudson, Marie del Rincón, Sonia Esfahani, Khashayar Berger, Claudie |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Wilson H. surname: Miller fullname: Miller, Wilson H. – sequence: 2 givenname: Theodore surname: Papadopoulos fullname: Papadopoulos, Theodore – sequence: 3 givenname: Sonia surname: del Rincón fullname: del Rincón, Sonia – sequence: 4 givenname: Claudie surname: Berger fullname: Berger, Claudie – sequence: 5 givenname: Marie surname: Hudson fullname: Hudson, Marie – sequence: 6 givenname: Khashayar surname: Esfahani fullname: Esfahani, Khashayar |
BookMark | eNqNkElOAzEQRS0EEmG4gzlANx476QULFDEFJDYgsbMcu0wbOnZkOyCuwYlxxLBmUSqp9H_Vr3eAdkMMgNAJJS1lhJwu5vctI0y2gre0U3mzXo8t6wTfQRMq2bSZTqXcRRMy5ayhM_60jw5yfiGEihmXE_S5OL_FPgx-6UtM2NUqA-CSQJcVhIKjw7lAit7iBC5pU2UfWAeLR--gKcNWCcGHZ-xXq02AJsFYJxZr-wYpA4a3uifjDCYGq6u5xB8pNgOY13X09c5fhnyE9pweMxz_9EP0eHnxML9u7u6vbubnd42hRPBGCC5J3zurl0Z2jvWddSCpttp0DCx1RHS6ny1t39fOKV8KbjsjmQBGXef4Ieq_95oUc67PqXXyqxpQUaK2cFWFq7ZwleDqF67awq3es2_vexwrnfw6bt4hqQH0WIZ_-L8AeHiK_Q |
ContentType | Journal Article |
Copyright | 2025 by American Society of Clinical Oncology |
Copyright_xml | – notice: 2025 by American Society of Clinical Oncology |
DBID | AAYXX CITATION |
DOI | 10.1200/JCO.2025.43.16_suppl.2643 |
DatabaseName | CrossRef |
DatabaseTitle | CrossRef |
DatabaseTitleList | CrossRef |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
Discipline | Medicine Pharmacy, Therapeutics, & Pharmacology |
EISSN | 1527-7755 |
EndPage | 2643 |
ExternalDocumentID | 10_1200_JCO_2025_43_16_suppl_2643 482362 |
Genre | meeting-report |
GroupedDBID | --- .55 0R~ 18M 34G 39C 4.4 5GY 5RE 8F7 AAQQT AARDX AAWTL AAYEP ABBLC ABJNI ABOCM ACGFO ACGFS ACGUR ADBBV AEGXH AENEX AIAGR ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS BAWUL BYPQX C45 CS3 DIK EBS EJD F5P F9R FBNNL FD8 GX1 HZ~ IH2 IPNFZ K-O KQ8 L7B LSO MJL N9A O9- OK1 OVD OWW P2P QTD R1G RHI RIG RLZ RUC SJN TEORI TR2 TWZ UDS VVN WH7 X7M YFH YQY .GJ 08G 08P 29K 2WC 3O- 53G 5VS 8WZ A6W AAKAS AAQOH AAYOK AAYXX ADZCM AFFNX AI. ASPBG AVWKF AZFZN CITATION D-I EX3 FEDTE H13 HVGLF J5H N4W NTWIH UHU VH1 WOQ WOW ZGI |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-c1043-4435099fdabc56f296dfe51adac62ed1f046a98bd996a9313b43d6c524e21f6f3 |
ISSN | 0732-183X |
IngestDate | Thu Jul 03 08:25:23 EDT 2025 Thu Jul 24 01:56:13 EDT 2025 |
IsPeerReviewed | true |
IsScholarly | true |
Issue | 16_suppl |
Language | English |
LinkModel | OpenURL |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c1043-4435099fdabc56f296dfe51adac62ed1f046a98bd996a9313b43d6c524e21f6f3 |
Notes | Abstract Disclosures |
PageCount | 198 |
ParticipantIDs | crossref_primary_10_1200_JCO_2025_43_16_suppl_2643 wolterskluwer_health_10_1200_JCO_2025_43_16_suppl_2643 |
PublicationCentury | 2000 |
PublicationDate | 20250601 2025-06-00 |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2025-06-01 |
PublicationDate_xml | – month: 6 year: 2025 text: 20250601 day: 1 |
PublicationDecade | 2020 |
PublicationTitle | Journal of clinical oncology |
PublicationTitleAbbrev | ASCO MEETING ABSTRACTS |
PublicationYear | 2025 |
Publisher | American Society of Clinical Oncology |
Publisher_xml | – name: American Society of Clinical Oncology |
SSID | ssj0014835 |
Score | 2.4842768 |
Snippet | 2643Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) boost anti-tumor immune responses but carry the risk of off-target effects, manifesting as immune-related... 2643 Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) boost anti-tumor immune responses but carry the risk of off-target effects, manifesting as immune-related... |
SourceID | crossref wolterskluwer |
SourceType | Index Database Publisher |
StartPage | 2643 |
Title | JAK inhibitor for the treatment of steroid refractory and life-threatening immune-related adverse events secondary to immune checkpoint inhibitors |
URI | https://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=JS&NEWS=n&CSC=Y&PAGE=fulltext&D=ovft&DO=10.1200/JCO.2025.43.16_suppl.2643 |
Volume | 43 |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
journalDatabaseRights | – providerCode: PRVAFT databaseName: Open Access Digital Library customDbUrl: eissn: 1527-7755 dateEnd: 99991231 omitProxy: true ssIdentifier: ssj0014835 issn: 0732-183X databaseCode: KQ8 dateStart: 19990101 isFulltext: true titleUrlDefault: http://grweb.coalliance.org/oadl/oadl.html providerName: Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries |
link | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1tj5NAEN6cZ3IxMRc9NZ5vWRO9LxxYWNjCx7N6qVevraaX9BvhZcmRa6ApNOb8Gf5iZ1hgQb2o94W2sJBpnodhdplnhpA3wmHRgMVctwPT1XGNQXeZG-gxlu-OIghhqyKu51M-vrDPls5y585-J2tpW4ZG9P2PupLboAr7AFdUyf4Hsu1FYQd8B3xhCwjD9p8wPjuZaGl2mYZwW27ahEGVOw6BINZByFOUqCSbqrWOrLe0ShOhl5c4UlQrIynqRIReSVsgBg2wT3MhtKq-U6EVOG2OMcEOQlU5VAO0o6t1nmalsqG4IdZt9Zd5FvXW8ZUUUdaN1MaGeqm1DuJ8nW9XeZ3KJHJsi9Icj8VK-5oCGiP29j2Ty7jgoNQCA-pKpcpxFWCyZHeBw3JUIlZHU4DOrk5jxTSVxupZ12rpNYfM0sFPLeUDrvbq1hCmEbIecOP2ZXWoht7cL7CLateV83qE6P387ZFjyW7ao5mBxhs2M5qLGeoS3TLf05k__3Dqf_40nfQPVlGFjR3oIaa4aw05x5Ycky_qtZjtyo6xzX_cI69rE97daEAv4Lr_LcckjOKq0mB0IqnFA7Jf04KeSD4_JDsiOyB753WSxwE5msty6tfHdKHUgcUxPaJzVWj9-hH5AfynLfco8J8C_2nLf5ontOY_VfynwH_6K_9pn_-05j-V_Kct_2mZ10Op4r-yoXhMLk4_LkZjve4xokcmJp7YMF2ASVISB2Hk8MTyeJwIxwziIOKWiM1kYPPAc8PY8-CTmSy0wbNFjmULy0x4wp6Q3SzPxFNCI8G9AQsdJ2aJbWGP0djDx7drD4ae44WHxGqA8NeylIyPU3AL3yePZj6i59vMb9DzEb1DwnuQ-VIe_fcTn932xOfknroLX5DdcrMVLyHwLsNXFRl_Avvo4QE |
linkProvider | Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=JAK+inhibitor+for+the+treatment+of+steroid+refractory+and+life-threatening+immune-related+adverse+events+secondary+to+immune+checkpoint+inhibitors&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+clinical+oncology&rft.au=Miller%2C+Wilson+H.&rft.au=Papadopoulos%2C+Theodore&rft.au=del+Rinc%C3%B3n%2C+Sonia&rft.au=Berger%2C+Claudie&rft.date=2025-06-01&rft.pub=American+Society+of+Clinical+Oncology&rft.issn=0732-183X&rft.eissn=1527-7755&rft.volume=43&rft.issue=16_suppl&rft.spage=2643&rft.epage=2643&rft_id=info:doi/10.1200%2FJCO.2025.43.16_suppl.2643&rft.externalDBID=NO_PDF_LINK&rft.externalDocID=482362 |
thumbnail_l | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0732-183X&client=summon |
thumbnail_m | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0732-183X&client=summon |
thumbnail_s | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0732-183X&client=summon |