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LiverTox: Clinical and Research Information on Drug-Induced Liver Injury [Internet]. Bethesda (MD): National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases; 2012-.

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LiverTox: Clinical and Research Information on Drug-Induced Liver Injury [Internet].

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Durvalumab

Last Update: June 23, 2022.

OVERVIEW

Introduction

Durvalumab is a human monoclonal antibody to programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1), which acts as a checkpoint inhibitor and is used in the immunotherapy of several forms of advanced or metastatic cancer. Durvalumab like other checkpoint inhibitors has major side effects and particularly immune related conditions, including acute hepatocellular and cholestatic liver injury which can be serious and even life threatening.

Background

Durvalumab (dur val’ ue mab) is a human recombinant monoclonal IgG1 kappa-isotype antibody to the ligand for the programmed cell death receptor (PD-L1), which has distinctive immunomodulatory activity and is used as a checkpoint inhibitor in cancer immunotherapy. The programmed cell death receptor 1 (PD-1) is an important checkpoint molecule that is expressed on activated T and B cells. Binding of the ligand to PD-1 activates programmed cell death pathways that terminate or down regulate cytotoxic T cell responses. Monoclonal antibody binding to PD-L1 prevents its engagement with the PD-1 receptor and subsequent induction of the cellular pathways that down regulate T cell responses. Inhibition of this pathway allows for a continued activation and proliferation of cytotoxic T cells and proinflammatory cytokines. The enhancement of cytotoxic reactivity may play a beneficial role in cancer immunotherapy by breaking immunological tolerance to cancer cell neo-antigens. In several large multicenter studies, durvalumab therapy resulted in a prolongation of progression free survival in patients with advanced, metastatic or unresectable urothelial carcinoma. Durvalumab was granted accelerated approved for use in advanced urothelial cancer in the United States in 2017. This specific indication was withdrawn in 2021 when postmarketing trials failed to show improvement in survival with durvalumab therapy more than with conventional therapy. However, indications for durvalumab were expanded to include advanced, refractory non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and extensive-stage small cell lung cancer (SCLC), and it continues to be evaluated as therapy of other advanced malignancies. Durvalumab is available as a solution in single use vials of 120 and 500 mg (50 mg/mL) under the brand name Imfinzi. The typical regimen is 10 mg/kg by intravenous infusion over 60 minutes every 2 weeks or 1500 mg every 4 weeks until disease progression or intolerance occurs.

As with most checkpoint inhibitors, side effects of durvalumab are common and can include fatigue, headache, musculoskeletal pain, arthralgia, abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, decreased appetite, weight loss, fever, cough, dyspnea, pruritus, and rash. Importantly, as a result of the immune enhancement, between 15% and 25% of treated patients develop immune related side effects. These reactions are high grade in 10% of patients and can include enterocolitis, dermatitis, endocrinopathy, pneumonitis, neuropathy, nephritis and hepatitis. Most of these reactions respond to discontinuation and corticosteroid therapy, but some have resulted in fatalities and some have required permanent discontinuation of the checkpoint inhibitor and long term immunosuppressive therapy. Baseline screening and regular monitoring for these adverse events during durvalumab therapy is recommended. Early recognition and prompt management of side effects is an integral component of proper use of checkpoint inhibitors. Checkpoints inhibitors should be used only by health care professionals with training in immunotherapy and experience in the management of the side effects of immunomodulatory agents. Other rare but potentially severe adverse effects of durvalumab include infusion hypersensitivity reactions and embryo-fetal toxicity.

Hepatotoxicity

Mild-to-moderate serum aminotransferase elevations are not uncommon (20% to 30%) during durvalumab therapy, but are usually self-limited and resolve even with continuing cyclic therapy. These rates of serum enzyme elevations are similar to those with other forms of chemotherapy for advanced malignancies. Serum ALT elevations above 5 times the upper limit of normal (ULN) occur in 1% to 4% of patients and generally lead to temporary or permanent discontinuation. Importantly, in 1% to 2% of treated patients the serum enzyme elevations evolve into an immune mediated liver injury that can be clinically apparent and can be severe. The onset of injury is typically after 2 to 4 cycles or 1 to 3 months after starting treatment. The pattern of enzyme elevation is usually hepatocellular but can be mixed or even cholestatic. Liver histology demonstrates a pan-lobular hepatitis with focal or confluent necrosis and prominent lymphocytic infiltrates of activated T cells, compatible with an immune mediated hepatic injury. More severe forms of hepatitis may demonstrate centrilobular (zone 3) necrosis. Despite features of immune mediated liver injury, autoantibodies are usually not present and immunoglobulin levels are typically normal. Because of the serious nature of the liver injury, monitoring with routine liver tests (including alkaline phosphatase) is recommended for patients who receive checkpoint inhibitor therapy. Treatment with corticosteroids generally results in a rapid improvement, allowing for their discontinuation within 1 to 2 months. In some instances, however, the clinical and biochemical response is inadequate, calling for addition of a second immunosuppressive agent such as azathioprine or mycophenolate mofetil. Restarting durvalumab or another checkpoint inhibitor after resolution of the hepatic injury is sometimes possible but can result in recurrence of injury and has not been shown to improve outcome of the cancer chemotherapy.

A proportion of patients receiving durvalumab develop cholestatic rather than hepatocellular liver injury. Cholestatic forms of immune mediated liver injury generally arise later than the hepatocellular forms (after 3 to 10 cycles) and are often accompanied by abdominal pain and jaundice. Alkaline phosphatase levels are markedly elevated while aminotransferase levels are only modestly increased. Imaging studies may show irregular dilatation of the intra- and/or extrahepatic bile ducts and thickening of the gall bladder and bile duct wall, but without evidence of frank obstruction. Liver biopsy shows portal inflammation and bile duct injury and endoscopic biopsy of the bile duct epithelium shows inflammation and scarring. The general features suggest a secondary form of sclerosing cholangitis or cholangiopathy. Therapy with immunosuppression may improve alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin levels but rarely leads to complete recovery, and long term cholestasis and hepatic failure can occur. Some patients with a cholestatic form of immune related hepatitis do not manifest the large bile duct changes but demonstrate loss and paucity of smaller intrahepatic bile ducts compatible with vanishing bile duct syndrome and similar to primary biliary cholangitis (PBC).

The effects of PD-L1 inhibition on chronic hepatitis B are not well defined but convincing examples of reactivation of hepatitis B have been described due to other checkpoint inhibitors. Most cases have occurred in patients with preexisting HBsAg, but rare instances were reported in individuals suspected of having with anti-HBc without HBsAg. Thus, screening patients for HBsAg, anti-HBc and anti-HBs is appropriate before initiating immunotherapy with checkpoint inhibitors. Patients with HBsAg should be considered for prophylaxis with an antiviral agent with potent activity against HBV such as entecavir or tenofovir. In patients with anti-HBc without HBsAg, monitoring and close attention to liver test abnormalities is probably adequate if antiviral therapy can be introduced rapidly for early evidence of reactivation. There has not been adequate experience with durvalumab in regard to the risk of reactivation of hepatitis B to provide rates of reactivation with and without antiviral prophylaxis.

Likelihood score: B (likely cause of clinically apparent, immune mediated liver injury and probable cause of reactivation of hepatitis).

Mechanism of Injury

The liver injury due to durvalumab is likely immunologically mediated and is usually at least partially responsive to corticosteroid or immunosuppressive therapy. Liver biopsies in cases of hepatocellular injury and bile duct epithelial cell biopsies in cholangiopathic injury demonstrate necrosis and inflammatory cell infiltration with cytotoxic CD8+ T cells, suggesting that the checkpoint inhibition allowed for activation of T cells directed at hepatocyte or cholangiocyte cell surface antigens.

Outcome and Management

Guidelines for management of patients receiving durvalumab recommend monitoring of liver tests and interrupting therapy for patients who develop serum aminotransferase elevations above 3 times the ULN and discontinuing treatment for values above 8 times the ULN in patients without pre-existing abnormalities or tumor involvement of the liver [in whom elevations of 5 and 10 times the ULN are used]. Corticosteroid therapy can be considered for patients with high or persistent ALT elevations or if symptoms or jaundice arise, initiating therapy with high dose intravenous methylprednisolone and switching to oral prednisone after 1 to 2 days, continuing tapering doses for at least 30 days.

Most cases of hepatitis due to checkpoint inhibitors resolve with prompt institution of immunosuppressive therapy which can be discontinued in 1 to 3 months. In some cases, adding a second agent (such as mycophenolate mofetil, azathioprine, antithymocyte globulin, infliximab or tacrolimus) and prolonged immunosuppression may be necessary. The few fatal cases that have been reported during immunotherapy with checkpoint inhibitors occurred in patients who had other severe immune related adverse events (Stevens Johnson syndrome, capillary leak syndrome) or who had an immune-related cholangiopathy or severe acute hepatitis resistant to immunosuppressive therapy. Restarting durvalumab after severe liver injury requiring corticosteroid therapy can be followed by recurrence of liver injury and is not recommended. Switching to other checkpoint inhibitors (ipilimumab or anti-PD-1 inhibitors) is more likely to be tolerated. However, survival rates do not seem to be improved by re-introduction of checkpoint inhibitor therapy after severe immune related adverse events. Thus, restarting therapy should be undertaken only after careful evaluation of the residual cancer status.

Drug Class: Antineoplastic Agents, Monoclonal Antibodies, Checkpoint Inhibitors

CASE REPORT

Case 1. Acute mixed liver injury due to durvalumab.(1)

A 77 year old woman with metastatic breast cancer developed elevations in serum enzymes after starting durvalumab therapy. She had no history of liver disease, and liver tests were normal before starting checkpoint inhibitor therapy. With the initial two infusions of durvalumab she was found to have mild to moderate serum ALT elevations (3 to 5 times ULN) one week later which resolved by the time of the next planned infusion (Table). The degree of aminotransferase elevations after infusions appeared to decline with the third and fourth infusions. At the time of the 6th planned cycle, however, her aminotransferase and alkaline phosphatase levels were both markedly elevated (Table). Serum total bilirubin levels and INR were normal. Tests for hepatitis A, B and C were negative. Antinuclear and smooth muscle antibodies were negative. Abdominal ultrasound and CT scans showed no evidence of bile duct dilation or abnormalities. Liver biopsy was not done. She was started on high dose oral prednisone (1 mg/kg daily), which was followed by a slow improvement in enzymes, but worsening when prednisone doses were lowered. She was also found to be hypothyroid and was started on levothyroxine. After 3 months of corticosteroid therapy, azathioprine was added which allowed for discontinuation of prednisone. Six months after onset her liver tests were normal while on azathioprine alone. Checkpoint inhibitor therapy was not restarted. Subsequently, azathioprine was stopped and liver tests remained normal. She was treated with capecitabine and doxorubicin, but died of complications of advanced breast cancer 6 months later.

Key Points

Medication:

Durvalumab (1120 mg iv every 3 weeks)

Pattern:

Mixed initially (R=2.3), cholestatic thereafter (R=0.6 to 1.6)

Severity:

1+ (liver enzyme elevations without jaundice)

Latency:

4 months

Recovery:

4-6 months

Other medications:

None mentioned

Laboratory Values

Days After
Starting
Days After
Stopping
ALT
(U/L)
Alk P
(U/L)
Bilirubin
(mg/dL)
Comment

-21

32

129

0.2

0 (1st dose)

30

125

0.3

Durvalumab started

7

190

107

0.4

21 (2nd dose)

38

120

0.4

28

112

114

0.3

42 (3rd dose)

25

99

0.4

49

43

86

0.3

63 (4th dose)

17

98

0.3

70

41

109

0.4

84 (5th dose)

26

105

0.4

91

33

89

0.4

105 (dose held)

0

417

511

0.6

Prednisone (1 mg/kg)

114

9

86

293

0.4

Prednisone taper

119

14

54

245

0.4

126

21

70

244

0.4

133

28

165

312

0.4

140

35

267

713

0.3

Prednisone dose increase

162

57

67

499

0.6

176

71

34

109

1.2

Azathioprine added

232

127

51

61

1.4

Prednisone stopped

301

196

39

72

0.7

Normal Values

<45

<130

<1.2

Comment

The mild-to-moderate and transient elevations of ALT after initial infusions of durvalumab represent the well known frequent ALT elevations that occur during checkpoint inhibitor therapy. Following 5 cycles, however, more substantial and persistent elevations of both ALT and alkaline phosphatase occurred and immunosuppressive therapy with corticosteroids was started. The liver injury was cholestatic but there was no evidence of bile duct dilation or cholangiopathy. Ultimately, prednisone was stopped and she was maintained on azathioprine alone. While checkpoint inhibitor liver injury has been described as usually hepatocellular and monitoring for ALT and AST are recommended, cholestatic cases with prominent elevations in alkaline phosphatase such as in this case occur and are typically more resistant to immunosuppressive therapy.

PRODUCT INFORMATION

REPRESENTATIVE TRADE NAMES

Durvalumab – Imfinzi®

DRUG CLASS

Antineoplastic Agents

COMPLETE LABELING

Product labeling at DailyMed, National Library of Medicine, NIH

CHEMICAL FORMULA AND STRUCTURE

DRUGCAS REGISTRY NO.MOLECULAR FORMULASTRUCTURE
Durvalumab 1428935-60-7 Monoclonal AntibodyNot Available

CITED REFERENCE

1.
Fontana RJ, Hayashi PH, Barnhart H, Stolz A, Odin J, Gu S., Drug Induced Liver Injury Network. Checkpoint inhibitor hepatotoxicity is characterized by peripheral eosinophilia and hepatocellular or mixed injury at onset but a low risk of liver failure during follow up. Hepatology. 2020;72 Suppl 1:A1185.

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

References updated: 23 June 2022

Abbreviations used: CPI, checkpoint inhibitor; CTLA-4, cytotoxic T lymphocyte associated antigen 4; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; irAE, immune related adverse event; PD-1, programmed cell death receptor 1; PD-L1, programmed cell death receptor ligand-1; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; SCLC, small cell lung cancer.

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    (Among 41 patients with advanced, refractory urothelial bladder cancer treated with durvalumab for up to 12 months, the objective response rate was 31% and adverse event rate 64%; most frequently fatigue [13%], diarrhea [10%] and anorexia [8%]; no mention of ALT elevations or hepatotoxicity).
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    (Among 102 patients with refractory NSCLC treated with various doses of durvalumab [anti-PD-L1] and tremelimumab [anti-CTLA-4], side effects were common leading to discontinuations in 28% and ALT elevations in 0% to 12% of regimens).
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    (Among 2088 safety reports of check point inhibitors enrolled in an Italian pharmacovigilance registry, 801 were immune related including gastrointestinal [33%], skin [17%] and liver [2.7%] due to nivolumab [70%], pembrolizumab [11%], ipilimumab [15%], atezolizumab [4%] and avelumab [<1%]).
  • Nakamura M, Otsuka T, Hayashi R, Horita T, Ota M, Sakurai N, Takano H, et al. Durvalumab-induced immune-related hepatitis in a patient with non-small cell lung cancer. Intern Med. 2020;59:2711–2717. [PMC free article: PMC7691038] [PubMed: 32669493]
    (79 year old man with NCSLC developed liver test abnormalities on day 208 of durvalumab maintenance therapy [bilirubin 1.0 mg/dL, ALT 1425 U/L, Alk P 757 U/L, INR normal], biopsy showing a panlobular hepatitis and liver tests falling into the normal range within a month of starting corticosteroid therapy).
  • Nakashima K, Demura Y, Oi M, Tabata M, Tada T, Shiozaki K, Akai M, et al. Infliximab was found to be effective for treating immunosuppressive drug-resistant hepatitis due to durvalumab. Intern Med. 2020;59:3055–3059. [PMC free article: PMC7759708] [PubMed: 32727989]
    (69 year old man with squamous cell lung cancer developed jaundice 38 days after a single dose of durvalumab [bilirubin 7.5 mg/dL, ALT 337 U/L, Alk P 3196 U/L], with minimal improvement despite therapy with prednisolone, mycophenolate, azathioprine and tacrolimus, but prompt improvement with a first dose of infliximab, but Alk P remained above 1000 U/L 4 months later still on corticosteroids).
  • Powles T, van der Heijden MS, Castellano D, Galsky MD, Loriot Y, Petrylak DP, Ogawa O, et al. DANUBE study investigators. Durvalumab alone and durvalumab plus tremelimumab versus chemotherapy in previously untreated patients with unresectable, locally advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma (DANUBE): a randomised, open-label, multicentre, phase 3 trial. Lancet Oncol. 2020;21:1574–1588. [PubMed: 32971005]
    (Among 1032 patients with advanced urothelial carcinoma treated with durvalumab [with or without tremelimumab] or conventional chemotherapy, survival was similar in the three groups, but high grade immune related adverse events were more common with durvalumab [6% and 17% vs <1%] and 2 of 345 treated with durvalumab alone died of liver failure [acute liver failure and progressive cholestasis]).
  • Goldman JW, Dvorkin M, Chen Y, Reinmuth N, Hotta K, Trukhin D, Statsenko G, et al. CASPIAN investigators. Durvalumab, with or without tremelimumab, plus platinum-etoposide versus platinum-etoposide alone in first-line treatment of extensive-stage small-cell lung cancer (CASPIAN): updated results from a randomised, controlled, open-label, phase 3 trial. Lancet Oncol. 2021;22:51–65. [PubMed: 33285097]
    (Among 805 patients with advanced small-cell lung cancer treated with platinum-etoposide alone or with durvalumab with or without tremelimumab, median survival was slightly better with durvalumab alone [12.9 vs 10.4 and 10.5 months] while high grade immune related adverse events were more frequent [5% and 14% vs <1%] and 2 patients on durvalumab died of liver failure).
  • Mathieu L, Shah S, Pai-Scherf L, Larkins E, Vallejo J, Li X, Rodriguez L, et al. FDA approval summary: atezolizumab and durvalumab in combination with platinum-based chemotherapy in extensive stage small cell lung cancer. Oncologist. 2021;26:433–438. [PMC free article: PMC8100557] [PubMed: 33687763]
    (FDA summary of data supporting approval of atezolizumab and durvalumab in combination with conventional platinum based chemotherapy for advanced small cell lung cancer, clinical trials demonstrating a slight increase in median survival [12.3 and 13.0 months vs 10.3 months] for both PD-L1 monoclonal checkpoint inhibitors compared to conventional chemotherapy alone).
  • Forde PM, Anagnostou V, Sun Z, Dahlberg SE, Kindler HL, Niknafs N, Purcell T, et al. Durvalumab with platinum-pemetrexed for unresectable pleural mesothelioma: survival, genomic and immunologic analyses from the phase 2 PrE0505 trial. Nat Med. 2021;27:1910–1920. [PMC free article: PMC8604731] [PubMed: 34750557]
    (Among 55 patients with unresectable pleural mesothelioma treated with durvalumab, platinum and pemetrexed, median survival was 20.4 months [compared to 12 months in historical controls], and adverse events were usually mild, there were no high grade immune related adverse events and only one patient had mild and transient ALT elevations).
  • Godbert B, Petitpain N, Lopez A, Nisse YE, Gillet P. Hepatitis B reactivation and immune check point inhibitors. Dig Liver Dis. 2021;53:452–455. [PubMed: 32921602]
    (67 year old man with metastatic lung cancer developed acute liver injury 21 days after a single dose of durvalumab [bilirubin 8.1 mg/dL, ALT 1168 U/L, GGT 847 U/L, HBsAg positive, HBV DNA 10 million IU/mL], with progressive hepatic failure and death 19 days later despite tenofovir therapy).
  • Wong GL, Wong VW, Hui VW, Yip TC, Tse YK, Liang LY, Lui RN, et al. Hepatitis flare during immunotherapy in patients with current or past hepatitis B virus infection. Am J Gastroenterol. 2021;116:1274–1283. [PubMed: 33560651]
    (Among 990 patients in Hong Kong with advanced malignancies treated with checkpoint inhibitors between 2014 and 2019 [397 HBsAg positive, 482 with anti-HBc or anti-HBs, 111 negative for both at baseline], 39% of HBsAg-positive vs 30% of HBsAg-negative patients developed ALT elevations during therapy, but only two cases [both HBsAg positive and on prophylaxis] were due to HBV reactivation).
  • Mustafayev K, Torres H. Hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus reactivation in cancer patients receiving novel anticancer therapies. Clin Microbiol Infect. 2022:S1198-743X(22)00119-7. [PubMed: 35283317]
    (Review of the literature on reactivation of HBV and HCV in patients on “novel” anticancer therapy concludes that reactivation can occur with checkpoint inhibitor therapy but largely among HBsAg positive patients and only rarely in patients with resolved hepatitis B).
  • Yoo S, Lee D, Shim JH, Kim KM, Lim YS, Lee HC, Yoo C, et al. Risk of hepatitis B virus reactivation in patients treated with immunotherapy for anti-cancer treatment. Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2022;20:898–907. [PubMed: 34182151]
    (Among 3,465 patients with advanced malignancies treated with checkpoint inhibitors between 2015 and 2020 at a single referral center in Korean, 511 [15%] were HBsAg positive at baseline, reactivation of HBV occurred in 5 of 511 [1%] HBsAg positive vs none of 2,954 HBsAg negative patients, arising in 2 of 464 [0.4%] patients given prophylaxis [both having stopped antivirals] vs 3 of 47 not given prophylaxis [6.4%]; reactivation arising after 3-141 weeks [median 54 weeks] of nivolumab [n=2], pembrolizumab [n=2] or ipilimumab and nivolumab [n=1] treatment, ALT peak 53 to 1768 IU/mL, HBV DNA 6,100 to 3.9 million IU/mL, resolving with 2 to 6 weeks of starting antiviral therapy).
  • Schoenfeld JD, Giobbie-Hurder A, Ranasinghe S, Kao KZ, Lako A, Tsuji J, Liu Y, et al. Durvalumab plus tremelimumab alone or in combination with low-dose or hypofractionated radiotherapy in metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer refractory to previous PD(L)-1 therapy: an open-label, multicentre, randomised, phase 2 trial. Lancet Oncol. 2022;23:279–291. [PMC free article: PMC8813905] [PubMed: 35033226]
    (Among 90 patients with NSCLC resistant to anti-PD-1 or anti-PD-L1 therapy who were treated with durvalumab combined with tremelimumab or low dose radiation, the objective response rate was 11% and 8% and the adverse event rate was 76% but only one patient had mild, transient ALT elevations).
  • Avrillon V, Daniel C, Boisselier P, Le Péchoux C, Chouaid C. Nationwide real-life safety and treatment exposure data on durvalumab after concurrent chemoradiotherapy in unresectable stage III, locally advanced, non-small cell lung cancer: analysis of patients enrolled in the French early access program. Lung. 2022;200:95–105. [PubMed: 35141799]
    (Among 576 patients with advanced NSCLC treated with durvalumab at 188 French referral centers, the adverse event rate was 64% including serious events in 12%, 4 cases of which were hepatobiliary, but there were no liver related deaths).
  • Naidoo J, Vansteenkiste JF, Faivre-Finn C, Özgüroğlu M, Murakami S, Hui R, Quantin X, et al. Characterizing immune-mediated adverse events with durvalumab in patients with unresectable stage III NSCLC: A post-hoc analysis of the PACIFIC trial. Lung Cancer. 2022;166:84–93. [PubMed: 35245844]
    (Reanalysis of the PACIFIC trial of durvalumab in NSCLC found immune related adverse events in 20.1% [9.4% pneumonitis], which were high grade in 3.6% [1.9% pneumonitis] with only 2 patients with liver related immune mediated events [ALT elevation]).
  • Spigel DR, Faivre-Finn C, Gray JE, Vicente D, Planchard D, Paz-Ares L, Vansteenkiste JF, et al. Five-year survival outcomes from the PACIFIC Trial: Durvalumab After Chemoradiotherapy in Stage III Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer. J Clin Oncol. 2022;40:1301–1311. [PMC free article: PMC9015199] [PubMed: 35108059]
    (Follow up of patients with advanced NSCLC treated enrolled in the PACIFIC trial of adjuvant therapy found the overall 5-year estimated survival to be 43% for durvalumab vs 33% for placebo, a similar difference to what was found at 1 and 3 years; no further information on liver injury or its consequences).
  • Park S, Noh JM, Choi YL, Chi SA, Kim K, Jung HA, Lee SH, et al. Durvalumab with chemoradiotherapy for limited-stage small-cell lung cancer. Eur J Cancer. 2022;169:42–53. [PubMed: 35500460]
    (Among 50 patients with small cell lung cancer treated with four 3-week cycles of etoposide, cisplatin and durvalumab, the 24 month progression-free survival was 42% and adverse events included one case of high grade immune related hepatitis that resolved with corticosteroid therapy).
  • Ueno M, Takabatake H, Hata A, Kayahara T, Morimoto Y, Notohara K, Mizuno M. Mycophenolate mofetil for immune checkpoint inhibitor-related hepatotoxicity relapsing during dose reduction of corticosteroid: a report of two cases and literature review. Cancer Rep (Hoboken). 2022 May 16:e1624. Epub ahead of print. [PMC free article: PMC9458512] [PubMed: 35575047]
    (Two men, ages 74 and 46 years, with advanced or metastatic lung cancer developed immune related pneumonitis and hepatitis after a 2nd and a 1st cycle of chemotherapy with durvalumab, responding partially to high doses of prednisolone but relapsing with lower doses, and then responding more completely with addition of mycophenolate mofetil [2000 mg/daily]).

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