Immune-related adverse reactions in the hepatobiliary system: second-generation check-point inhibitors highlight diverse histological changes
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Authors
Zen, Yoh
Chen, Yen‐Ying
Jeng, Yung‐Ming
Tsai, Hung‐Wen
Yeh, Matthew M
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Issue Date
2020
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Article
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AIMS: Immune check-point inhibitors are known to cause immune-mediated adverse liver injury, but our knowledge is mainly based on cases treated with ipilimumab or nivolumab. METHODS AND RESULTS: Clinicopathological features of 10 patients with hepatobiliary adverse reactions caused by second-generation drugs, pembrolizumab (n = 6) and atezolizumab (n = 4), were reviewed. Liver dysfunction developed during a median period of 3.5 weeks after administration of the check-point inhibitor (3 days-1 year). Antinuclear antibodies were detected in two patients at a low titre (1/80), and serum IgG concentrations were also only mildly elevated in two patients. Liver biopsies showed panlobular hepatitis (n = 5), cholangiopathic changes (n = 2), granulomatous injury (n = 2) and bland cholestasis (n = 1). Two cases of cholangiopathy (both pembrolizumab-treated) showed diffuse sclerosing cholangitis on imaging, and one also presented lymphocytic cholangitis resembling primary biliary cholangitis on biopsy. In two atezolizumab-treated cases, Küpffer cells were hyperplastic and aggregated, forming microgranulomas. Confluent necrosis and eosinophilic or plasma cell infiltration were rare. On immunostaining, the ratio of CD8 CONCLUSIONS: Pembrolizumab and atezolizumab manifested not only lobular hepatitis but also sclerosing cholangitis, lymphocytic duct injury and granulomatous hepatitis, probably representing various impaired cellular functions in CD8
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Histopathology
Volume
76
Issue
3
