
Diagnosis and management of immune‐related adverse effects of immune checkpoint therapy in the emergency department
Author(s) -
Yeung SaiChing Jim,
Qdaisat Aiham,
Chaftari Patrick,
Lipe Demis,
Merlin Jeffrey,
Rajha Eva,
Wechsler Adriana,
Sandoval Marcelo,
Viets Jayne,
AlBreiki Aisha,
Shah Mohsin,
Pandey Ramesh,
Kamal Mona,
Khattab Osama,
Toale Katy,
Wattana Monica,
Elsayem Ahmed,
Gaeta Susan,
Brock Patricia,
ReyesGibby Cielito,
Alagappan Kumar
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of the american college of emergency physicians open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2688-1152
DOI - 10.1002/emp2.12209
Subject(s) - emergency department , adverse effect , medicine , immune system , immune checkpoint , intensive care medicine , immunotherapy , immunology , psychiatry
Rapid advances in cancer immunotherapy using immune checkpoint inhibitors have led to significantly improved survival. Rapid identification of the toxicity syndromes associated with these therapeutic agents is very important for emergency physicians because the population of patients diagnosed with cancer is increasing and cancer therapies including immune checkpoint inhibitors have become the first‐line treatment for more and more types of cancer. The emergency medicine literature lags behind rapid advances in oncology, and oncology guidelines for rapid recognition and management of these emerging toxicity syndromes are not familiar to emergency physicians. In this review article, we discuss the clinical presentation and management of immune‐related adverse effects during the critical first hours of emergency care. We also suggest a workflow for the recognition and treatment of emergencies arising from serious immune‐related adverse effects, including but not limited to colitis, adrenal crisis, myocarditis, pneumonitis, myasthenic crisis, diabetic ketoacidosis, bullous pemphigus, and hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis. Rapid advances in cancer therapy are bringing new diagnostic and therapeutic challenges to emergency providers, and therefore it is crucial to raise awareness and provide guidelines for the management of new treatment‐related toxicities.