Authors
Angeliki M Stamatouli, Zoe Quandt, Ana Luisa Perdigoto, Pamela L Clark, Harriet Kluger, Sarah A Weiss, Scott Gettinger, Mario Sznol, Arabella Young, Robert Rushakoff, James Lee, Jeffrey A Bluestone, Mark Anderson, Kevan C Herold
Publication date
2018/8/1
Source
Diabetes
Volume
67
Issue
8
Pages
1471-1480
Publisher
American Diabetes Association
Description
Insulin-dependent diabetes may occur in patients with cancers who are treated with checkpoint inhibitors (CPIs). We reviewed cases occurring over a 6-year period at two academic institutions and identified 27 patients in whom this developed, or an incidence of 0.9%. The patients had a variety of solid-organ cancers, but all had received either anti–PD-1 or anti–PD-L1 antibodies. Diabetes presented with ketoacidosis in 59%, and 42% had evidence of pancreatitis in the peridiagnosis period. Forty percent had at least one positive autoantibody and 21% had two or more. There was a predominance of HLA-DR4, which was present in 76% of patients. Other immune adverse events were seen in 70%, and endocrine adverse events in 44%. We conclude that autoimmune, insulin-dependent diabetes occurs in close to 1% of patients treated with anti–PD-1 or –PD-L1 CPIs. This syndrome has similarities and differences …
Total citations
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