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Resumen de Cytomegalovirus infection as an underestimated trigger for checkpoint inhibitor-related pneumonitis in lung cancer: a retrospective study

X. Lin, T. Lu, S. Li, X. Xie, X. Chen, J. Jiang, Y. Qin, Z. Xie, M. Liu, M. Ouyang, N. Zhong, Y. Song, C. Zhou

  • Objectives Checkpoint inhibitor-related pneumonitis (CIP) is a rare but potentially fatal complication of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). At present, the mechanism of CIP is not completely clear. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is widespread in the population. Chemotherapy and radiotherapy can lead to the reactivation of CMV. We aimed to investigate the association between CMV infection and CIP.

    Materials and methods We retrospectively identified all lung cancer patients treated with ICIs at our institute from January 2016 to May 2020. The association between the development of CIP and CMV infection status was analyzed.

    Results Among 251 cases analyzed, 29 (11.6%) patients with CIP were identified, of whom 12 (4.78%) cases had grade 3–4 CIP. All 12 patients with grade 3–4 pneumonitis were CMV-IgG-positive, indicating a previous CMV infection. Except for one CMV-DNA-positive patient, the other patients were CMV-DNA-negative. All but one patient was CMV pp65 antigen-positive, indicating an early reactivation of the virus. The histological features of CMV pneumonia were not found in all available lung tissues, including lung transplantation pathology in one patient and lung biopsies in three patients. Except for one patient who received delayed antiviral therapy, the symptoms improved after glucocorticoid combined with antiviral therapy.

    Conclusions The use of ICIs can restore the immune function and cause an immune response to CMV antigen while the infection is still latent. Our study suggests that CIP may be an immune reconstitution syndrome associated with CMV infection. CMV infection may represent a potentially important trigger for CIP. Patients with severe CIP should be vigilant against CMV infection. The early use of glucocorticoid combined with antiviral therapy is pivotal to good prognosis.


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