Pneumonitis, appendicitis, and biliary obstruction during toripalimab treatment in a patient with extensive-stage small-cell lung cancer: a case report.

2021 
In recent years, immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have become a standard treatment for patients with advanced lung cancers. With the widespread use of immunotherapy in clinical practice, immune-related adverse events (irAEs) have become increasingly common. This case report details a 72-year-old man with small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) who developed pneumonitis, appendicitis, and biliary obstruction during treatment with toripalimab. The patient was initially diagnosed with limited-stage SCLC in January 2019 and completed 5 sequential cycles of etoposide/cisplatin (EP) and radiotherapy (60 Gy/30 F). The overall response was complete response (CR) after first line treatment. He developed radiation pneumonitis after completion of radiotherapy, which responded well to symptomatic treatment. Due to newly diagnosed bone metastasis, he was administered toripalimab intravenously every 3 weeks and 12 mg anlotinib orally once a day from January 2020. By the third cycle, the patient presented with electrocardiographic abnormalities, gingival swelling and pain, and hoarseness, and consequently, the anlotinib was suspended. After 4 cycles, he developed suppurative appendicitis, which was managed successfully with anti-inflammatory agents. He then presented with shortness of breath on exertion and after a comprehensive examination, he was diagnosed with ICI-related-pneumonitis. After 6 weeks of treatment with methylprednisolone, the shortness of breath was mostly relieved and treatment continued. In June 2020, the patient developed severe vomiting. Computed tomography (CT) indicated biliary obstruction, and at endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) there was edema of the major papilla of the duodenum. The patient's symptoms were relieved after treatment with gastric acid suppression and antiemetics. Re-examination by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed that the biliary obstruction had been resolved. Although the disease progressed after immunotherapy, no tumor tissue related to the biliary obstruction was detected, and this was therefore classified as an irAE.
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