From the Journals

Checkpoint inhibitors’ ‘big picture’ safety shown with preexisting autoimmune diseases


 

FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE

Study largely bypasses the effects of checkpoint inhibitors on RA patients

“For detail, you can’t look to this study,” Anne R. Bass, MD, of the division of rheumatology at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York, said in an interview. “But for a big-picture look at ‘how safe are checkpoint inhibitors,’ I think it’s an important one.”

Dr. Anne R. Bass is the rheumatology fellowship program director at the Hospital for Special Surgery, New York

Dr. Anne R. Bass

Dr. Bass noted that the investigators lumped certain elements together and bypassed others, including their focus on grade 3 or higher adverse events. That was a decision the authors themselves recognized as a potential limitation of their research.

“Understandably, they were worried about life-threatening adverse events, and that’s fine,” she said. But for patients with arthritis who flare, their events are usually grade 2 or even grade 1 and therefore not captured or analyzed in the study. “This does not really address the risk of flare in an RA patient.”

She also questioned their grouping of AIDs, with a bevy of rheumatic diseases categorized as one cluster and the “other” group being particularly broad in its inclusion of “all AIDs not listed” – though only eight patients were placed into that group.

That said, the researchers relied on an oncology database, not one aimed at AID or adverse events. “The numbers are so much bigger than any other study in this area that’s been done,” she said. “It’s both a strength and a weakness of this kind of database.”

Indeed, the authors considered their use of nationwide, population-based data from the DMTR a benefit, calling it “a strength of our approach.”

The DMTR was funded by a grant from the Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development and sponsored by Bristol-Myers Squibb, Novartis, Roche Nederland, Merck Sharp & Dohme, and Pierre Fabre via the Dutch Institute for Clinical Auditing.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Baricitinib combo for COVID-19 accelerates recovery, study shows
MDedge Internal Medicine
Oral steroids plus PPIs increase osteoporotic fracture risk in RA patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
Gut microbiome influences response to methotrexate in new-onset RA patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
"Lipid paradox” seen in nonobese RA patients with low LDL
MDedge Internal Medicine
Arthritis drugs ‘impressive’ for severe COVID but not ‘magic cure’
MDedge Internal Medicine
Lung disease raises mortality risk in older RA patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
Tofacitinib for RA misses the mark in safety study
MDedge Internal Medicine
Patients with early arthritis may need tailored treatments
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA alert confirms heart and cancer risks with tofacitinib (Xeljanz)
MDedge Internal Medicine
Rheumatologic disease activity an important influencer of COVID-19 death risk
MDedge Internal Medicine