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Immune-related Liver Injury is a Poor Prognostic Factor in Patients with Nonsmall Cell Lung Cancer Treated with Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors.

Takafumi YamamotoTakanori ItoTetsunari HaseMasatoshi IshigamiKazuyuki MizunoKenta YamamotoNorihiro ImaiYoji IshizuTakashi HondaHirofumi ShibataTakahiro HattaNaoyuki YogoSatoshi YasudaHidenori ToyodaTakashi AbeHiroki KawashimaNaozumi HashimotoMitsuhiro Fujishiro
Published in: Cancer investigation (2021)
It remains unclear whether severe liver immune-related adverse events (liver-irAEs) can affect the prognosis in nonsmall cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) patients. Of the 365 NSCLC patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), 19 suffered from severe liver-irAEs (grade ≥3). The median time-to-onset of liver-irAEs was 53 days postinjection of the first ICI. The progression-free survival and overall survival of the liver-irAEs group (median 69 and 262 days, respectively) were significantly worse than the nonliver-irAEs group (128 and 722 days; P = 0.010 and P = 0.007; respectively). In conclusion, liver-irAEs were associated with poor prognosis in NSCLC patients.
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