Histopathologic Features of Unmasked Inflammatory Bowel Disease Following Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Therapy in Colon Biopsies

Typical immune checkpoint inhibitor-induced colitis (T-ICI) has significant histomorphologic overlap with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), a distinction further complicated in ICI-treated patients with pre-existing inflammatory bowel disease (P-IBD) and those with potentially “unmasked” inflammator...

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Veröffentlicht in:Gastro hep advances 2024, Vol.3 (7), p.986-994
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, M. Lisa, Algarrahi, Khalid, DiCarlo, Jamie, Elvin-Ivey, Abigail, Dougan, Michael, Mino-Kenudson, Mari
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Typical immune checkpoint inhibitor-induced colitis (T-ICI) has significant histomorphologic overlap with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), a distinction further complicated in ICI-treated patients with pre-existing inflammatory bowel disease (P-IBD) and those with potentially “unmasked” inflammatory bowel disease (U-IBD) after ICI therapy. This study describes histopathologic findings seen in U-IBD colonic biopsies and assesses for distinguishing features from T-ICI and P-IBD biopsies. Initial colon biopsies after symptom onset from 34 patients on ICI therapy were reviewed, and histopathologic features were tabulated. U-IBD patients were identified clinically based on rapid toxicity development post-ICI treatment with multiple recurrences after immune suppression, frequently with regional colitis (versus pancolitis). The study cohort was classified into T-ICI (n = 20), P-IBD (n = 9), and U-IBD (n = 5) groups. The predominant histological patterns were diffuse active colitis (35%) in the T-ICI, and chronic active colitis in both the P-IBD (67%) and U-IBD (60%) groups (overall P = .003, P > .05 between the two IBD groups). None of the T-ICI biopsies demonstrated chronicity features (ie, architectural distortion score 2, basal lymphoplasmacytosis, or Paneth cell metaplasia). Only U-IBD biopsies demonstrated basal lymphoplasmacytosis (60% vs 0% in T-ICI/P-IBD, P = .002). Among available follow-up biopsies, chronicity features were present in all (4/4) U-IBD patients, including those without chronicity seen in the initial biopsy, but none (0/7) of T-ICI patients. These early results show that no definite features of chronicity were seen in colon biopsies from T-ICI patients, suggesting that the presence of those features may be a clue to U-IBD in patients without a known IBD diagnosis. Frequent basal lymphoplasmacytosis seen in U-IBD may support a recent onset of mucosal injury and early architectural remodeling. [Display omitted]
ISSN:2772-5723
2772-5723
DOI:10.1016/j.gastha.2024.05.011