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    Dig Dis Sci. 2009 Jun 9. [Epub ahead of print]

    Refractory Colitis Following Anti-CTLA4 Antibody Therapy: Analysis of Mucosal FOXP3(+) T Cells.

    Lord JD, Hackman RC, Moklebust A, Thompson JA, Higano CS, Chielens D, Steinbach G, McDonald GB.

    Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA, jdlord@u.washington.edu.

    Ipilimumab is a humanized antibody to CTLA4 and is used to treat cancers refractory to conventional treatment. We treated 21 patients with refractory melanoma or prostate cancer with anti-CTLA4 antibody (ipilimumab), with subsequent development of significant colitis in nine cases. Two of these nine did not respond rapidly to high-dose (2 mg kg(-1) day(-1)) glucocorticoids or infliximab. They required additional immunosuppression, and one ultimately died of opportunistic infection, representing a more refractory course than has previously been described complicating ipilimumab therapy. Both patients had received radiation to the pelvis for prostate cancer less than 1 year prior to receiving ipilimumab. We performed immunohistochemical analysis of colon biopsies from ipilimumab recipients to determine if colitis correlates with depletion of intramucosal FOXP3(+) regulatory T cells (Tregs), which normally express CTLA4. However, we found no evidence of FOXP3(+) T cell depletion in any of the nine patients who developed colitis.

    PMID: 19507029 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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