Nivolumab has been associated with unique adverse events known as immune-related adverse events. Although interstitial lung disease (ILD) is a life-threatening immune-related adverse event, the risk of ILD during nivolumab treatment is unclear. In this report, we encountered three patients with stage IV non-small cell lung cancer with signs of lung obstruction caused by tumor-mediated compression on imaging who developed acute ILD within 10 days of commencing nivolumab treatment. The first case involved a 74-year-old Japanese female never-smoker, the second a 67-year-old Japanese female never-smoker, and the third a 75-year-old Japanese female current-smoker. The first patient was administered nivolumab as third-line chemotherapy, the second was administered nivolumab as fifth-line chemotherapy, and the third was administered nivolumab as second-line chemotherapy. Regardless of aggressive treatments for ILD, 2 of 3 patients died. The findings of these cases suggest that obstructive findings in the lungs, which easily cause infections, may be an important risk factor for nivolumab-induced ILD.
Keywords: Adverse effect; Interstitial lung disease; Lung cancer; Nivolumab; Pneumonia.
Copyright © 2017 Japanese Society of Chemotherapy and The Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.