Extracorporeal photopheresis as a therapeutic approach for treatment resistant immune-related adverse events in anti-PD-1-treated melanoma patients

Thielmann CM, Seier JA, Schielke L, Albrecht LJ, Zimmer L, Livingstone E, Zaremba A, Lodde G, Dissemond J, Sondermann W, Krefting F, Tasdogan A, Roesch A, Hadaschik E, Rambow F, Griewank K, Ugurel S, Schadendorf D, Placke JM (2025)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2025

Journal

Book Volume: 16

Article Number: 1727312

DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2025.1727312

Abstract

Background: Checkpoint inhibition induced immune-related adverse events (irAE) may be steroid-dependent or steroid-refractory and are associated with increased morbidity, mortality and potentially compromised anti-tumor immunity. Extracorporeal photopheresis (ECP) has emerged as an alternative for salvage therapy, however, evidence remains scarce. Methods: This monocenter retrospective study included patients with either irColitis or irHepatitis, who received ECP after failure or dependence on high-dose corticosteroids + infliximab/vedolizumab or mycophenolate mofetil/tacrolimus. Clinical activity was quantified at least weekly (stool frequency for colitis; AST/ALT for hepatitis) and primary endpoint was change in irAE activity over time. Secondary analyses included steroid-sparing, overall safety, and melanoma-specific outcomes. Spearman’s correlation assessed irAE severity reduction. Results: Six patients were included in this study (irColitis n = 4; irHepatitis n = 2; CTCAE ≥ 3). Extracorporeal photopheresis was started after initial therapy with corticosteroids and immunosuppression was not successful. All ECP cycles included two consecutive treatment days. irAE activity declined promptly after ECP across patients: irColitis showed strong negative correlation with time since ECP (rs range -0.88 to -0.97); irHepatitis displayed parallel ALT/AST declines (rs ≥ -0.92). Corticosteroids were tapered following ECP start with a median corticosteroid reduction across all patients to 25% of baseline dose (IQR: 20.7 - 33.3) by week 4 and to <5% of baseline dose by week 9 (IQR: 1.6 - 4.7). No ECP-related adverse events were observed. Accelerated disease progression was not observed during or after ECP. Conclusions and relevance: This study of six patients with irColitis or irHepatitis provides evidence that use of ECP is associated with clinical remission and steroid sparing, while demonstrating an excellent safety profile and not compromising disease control. Our data supports the use of ECP as salvage therapy for steroid- and immunosuppression- refractory irAE in cancer patients.

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How to cite

APA:

Thielmann, C.M., Seier, J.A., Schielke, L., Albrecht, L.J., Zimmer, L., Livingstone, E.,... Placke, J.M. (2025). Extracorporeal photopheresis as a therapeutic approach for treatment resistant immune-related adverse events in anti-PD-1-treated melanoma patients. Frontiers in Immunology, 16. https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2025.1727312

MLA:

Thielmann, Carl Maximilian, et al. "Extracorporeal photopheresis as a therapeutic approach for treatment resistant immune-related adverse events in anti-PD-1-treated melanoma patients." Frontiers in Immunology 16 (2025).

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