Immune check point inhibitors have been used sparingly in
the organ transplant world.
A review last time we did on this topic in Journal of Onconephrology listed a list of cases that led to rejection in majority of the cases when PD-1 inhibitors( nivolumab or pembrolizumab) was used alone or in combination with CTLA-4 inhibitors.
A review last time we did on this topic in Journal of Onconephrology listed a list of cases that led to rejection in majority of the cases when PD-1 inhibitors( nivolumab or pembrolizumab) was used alone or in combination with CTLA-4 inhibitors.
Last year, a case from our
institution(Barnett et al.) showed that if pre emptive steroids and mTOR
inhibitors were used, rejection could be potentially prevented in a single case
report. To date, to my knowledge, this has not been repeated. Nevertheless, new
cases have come to light showing more rejection but a few showing no rejection
despite PD-1 inhibitor use.
Transplant type
|
ICI therapy
|
Time
|
Rejection(yes/no)
|
Graft loss(yes/no
|
Reference
|
DDRT
|
Ipilimumab
|
None
|
No
|
No
|
|
DDRT
|
Ipilimumab
|
None
|
No
|
No
|
|
DDRT
|
Ipilimumab +pembrolizumab
|
5 weeks
|
Cellular and antibody rejection
|
Yes
|
|
DDRT
|
Pembrolizumab
|
8 weeks
|
Cellular rejection
|
Yes
|
|
DDRT
|
Ipilimumab + nivolumab
|
5 weeks
|
Cellular rejection
|
Yes
|
|
DDRT
|
Nivolumab
|
6 weeks
|
Cellular rejection
|
Yes
|
|
DDRT
|
Pembrolizumab
|
6 weeks
|
Cellular rejection
|
Yes
|
|
DDRT
|
Nivolumab
|
3 weeks
|
Cellular rejection
|
Yes
|
|
DDRT
|
Ipilimumab + nivolumab
|
1 week
|
Cellular rejection
|
Yes
|
|
LRRT
|
Pembrolizumab
|
None
|
No
|
No
|
|
DDRT
|
Pembrolizumab + chemo
|
None
|
No
|
No
|
The last four cases shed some new light. Miller et al and
Deltombe et al showed two cases that had converted to everolimus but still had
rejection. No pre treatment of steroids were used. Saadat et al
and Wu
et al, no immunosuppressive treatments were made and PD-1 inhibitors were
used and no rejection happened but cancers did progress. Saadat et al
did use high levels of sirolimus during the treatment of the PD-1 inhibitor. The
last case is fascinating as no pre- treatment was used and the patient had a
DDRT and despite getting cisplatin, bevacizumab and PD-1 inhibitor, the
creatinine remained stable. Could VEGF inhibition be protective here? Why did
this patient not reject? Perhaps The Barnett et al
case and Saadat
et al didn’t reject due to being LRRT and having accommodation and
tolerance but Wu case is intriguing.
A twitter poll I did on what folks are doing around showed
the following when using PD-1 inhibitors in the renal transplant world.
Are you using Pd-1 inhibitors in renal Transplant patients ?— Kenar Jhaveri (@kdjhaveri) January 1, 2018
What are your thoughts?
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