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Pneumonitis after immune checkpoint inhibitor therapies in patients with acute myeloid leukemia: A retrospective cohort study.

Ajay SheshadriAlberto A GoizuetaVickie R ShannonDavid LondonGuillermo Garcia ManeroHagop M KantarjianFarhad Ravandi-KashaniTapan Mahendra KadiaMarina Y KonoplevaCourtney D D DiNardoSherry PierceAbdulrazzak ZarifaAya A AlbittarLinda L ZhongFechukwu O AkhmedzhanovMuhammad H ArainMansour AlfayezAhmad AlotaibiMehmet AltanAung NaingTito R MendozaMyrna C B GodoyGirish ShroffSang T KimSaadia A FaizDimitrios P KontoyiannisFareed KhawajaKristofer JenningsNaval G Daver
Published in: Cancer (2022)
Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) remove inhibitory signals that reduce T-cell function and allow T-cells to better attack cancer cells. In acute myeloid leukemia (AML), the effectiveness of ICIs is limited in part by inflammation of the lung, called pneumonitis. This study reviewed 258 patients with AML who received ICIs and identified 30 patients who developed pneumonitis, nearly half of whom died. Older age and baseline shortness of breath increased pneumonitis risk, whereas female sex and higher baseline platelet counts decreased pneumonitis risk. Pneumonitis increased mortality by nearly 3-fold. This work highlights the significant harm imposed by pneumonitis after ICI therapies.
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