Study finds that patients with cancer and a suppressed immune system are at high risk for severe COVID if treated with systemic drug therapies

  • In immunosuppressed patients with cancer, treatment with systemic therapies, especially immunotherapies, raises their risk of severe COVID-19 and cytokine storm
  • Immunocompromised patients with cancer should be especially careful about avoiding COVID and, if necessary, should be aggressive about getting treatment

BOSTON – Patients with cancer and a weakened immune system who are treated with immunotherapies tend to fare far worse from COVID-19 than those who haven’t received such therapies in the three months before their COVID diagnosis, show findings in a new study by researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and across the U.S., Canada, and Mexico.  Researchers found worse outcomes in both the disease itself as well as the fierce immune response that sometimes accompanies it.

The study, posted online today by the journal JAMA Oncology, also found that immunocompromised patients treated with drug agents other than immunotherapies had more severe COVID than untreated patients, but not to the degree as those receiving immunotherapy.

On the positive side, researchers found that patients treated with immunotherapies – but whose immune systems were healthy – fared no worse from COVID than untreated patients did. 

The findings suggest that immunocompromised patients with cancer should be especially careful about avoiding COVID and, if they do contract the disease, should be aggressive about getting treatment, the study authors said. Patients whose immune systems have not been suppressed, however, can safely receive cancer therapies – immunotherapies or drug agents – without being at additional risk from COVID-19.

“It’s well established that COVID-19 disproportionately affects patients with cancer, and there’s evidence that patients treated with some types of systemic therapies – which suppress the immune system – often have worse outcomes,” said Toni Choueiri, MD, Director of the Lank Center for Genitourinary Oncology, Dana-Farber, co-senior study author. “This study was done to determine which patients are most at risk for adverse outcomes. We looked specifically at patients treated with immunotherapies, which stimulate the immune system to fight cancer, and those treated with other drugs that suppress the immune system.”

Drawing on the COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19) registry, researchers analyzed data from 12,046 patients with COVID-19 who had a current or past diagnosis of cancer, making it one of the largest data sets to date analyzed in relation to patients with COVID-19 and cancer. The analysis examined whether a suppressed immune system or treatment with immunotherapy was associated with worse outcomes from COVID-19 – with hospitalization or death from the disease, and with “cytokine storm,” a potentially dangerous overreaction of the immune system to infection. 

“We found that patients who were both immunocompromised and treated with immunotherapies did much worse than those who didn’t receive these therapies,” said Chris Labaki, MD, Dana-Farber, co-lead author on the paper. The other co-lead authors are Ziad Bakouny, MD, MSc, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and Punita Grover, MD, University of Cincinnati Cancer Center.

“Both cytokine storm and death from COVID were three to four times higher in this group,” said Bakouny. The same trend held true, but to a lesser extent, for patients who were immunocompromised and received some types of systemic treatments. “In this group cytokine storm and death from COVID were two to three times higher than in non-treated patients.”

The findings hold important messages for patients with cancer as well as their physicians, the study authors said. “Patients at high risk for severe COVID should take steps to keep that risk as low as possible: wearing a mask, avoiding crowded places, staying current with vaccines and boosters,” researchers said. “High-risk patients who have been exposed to the disease should get tested quickly and, if they test positive, get treated with antibodies or drugs that can reduce the disease’s severity.”

“When we counsel patients about treatment, it’s important that we discuss the benefits and risks of treatment with systemic therapies with respect to COVID-19,” said Choueiri, who is also on the CCC19 steering committee. Dana-Farber is a founding CCC19 institution. “The results of this study can help us know what to expect.”  

The co-senior authors, with Choueiri, are Yu Shyr, MD, of Vanderbilt University Medical Center, and Trisha M. Wise-Draper, MD, PhD, of the University of Cincinnati Cancer Center. The co-authors are Andrew L. Schmidt, MD, of Dana-Farber; Joy Awosika, MD, Shuchi Gulati, MD, Roman Jandarov, PhD, of the University of Cincinnati Cancer Center; Chih-Yuan Hsu, PhD, Sanjay Mishra, MS, PhD, and James Yang, of Vanderbilt University Medical Center; Saif I. Alimohamed of Wake Forest Baptist Comprehensive Cancer Center; Babar Bashir, MD, MS, and Andrea V. Rivera, MD, of Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center, Thomas Jefferson University; Stephanie Berg, DO, and Natalie Knox, of Loyola University Medical Center; Mehmet A. Bilen, MD, and Cecilia Castellano, of Winship Cancer Institute, Emory University; Daniel Bowles, MD, of the University of Colorado; Aakash Desai, MD, MPH, Arielle Elkrief, MD, Thorvardur R. Halfdanarson, MD, and Zhuoer Xie, MD, of the Mayo Clinic; Omar E. Eton, MD, and Emily Hsu, MD, of Hartford Healthcare Cancer Institute; Leslie A. Fecher, MD, of the University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center; Daniel Flora, MD, PharmD, and Alicia Gesenhues, PharmD, BCOP, of St. Elizabeth Health Care, Edgewood, Kentucky; Matthew D. Galsky, MD, and Michael T. Wotman, MD, of the Tisch Cancer Institute, Mount Sinai; Margaret E. Gatti-Mays, MD, MPH, of The Ohio State University; Michael J. Glover, MD, and Sumit A. Shah, MD, of Stanford University; Dharmesh Gopalakrishnan, MD, of Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center; Shilpa Gupta, MD, and Amanda Nizam of the Cleveland Clinic; Brandon Hayes-Lattin, MD of Knight Cancer Institute, Oregon Health and Science University; Mohamed Hendawi, MD, of Aurora Cancer Center, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Clara Hwang, MD, of Henry Ford Cancer Institute; Chinmay Jani, MD, and Lisa B. Weissmann, MD, of Mt. Auburn Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Monika Joshi, MD, MRCP, and Lauren Pomerantz, MS, of Penn State Cancer Institute; Hina Khan, MD, of Brown University and Lifespan Cancer Institute; Shaheer A. Khan, DO, and Gary K. Schwartz, MD, of Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, Columbia University; Vadim S. Koshkin, MD, and Daniel H. Kwon, MD, of UCSF, Helen Diller Comprehensive Cancer Center, San Francisco; Amit A. Kulkarni, MD, of Masonic Cancer Center, University of Minnesota; Sara Matar, MD, of Hollings Cancer Center, MUSC, Charleston; Rana R. McKay, MD, Taylor K. Nonato, and Justin Shaya, MD, of Moores Cancer Center, UCSD, San Diego; Feras A. Moria, of McGill University Health Centre; Nora L. Nock, PhD, of Case Comprehensive Cancer Center, Cleveland; Justin Panasci, MD, of Jewish General Hospital, McGill University; Andrew J. Portuguese, MD, and Lisa M. Tachiki, MD of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center; Destie Provenzano and Yuan J. Rao, MD, of George Washington University; Matthew Puc, MD, of Virtua Health, Marlton, New Jersey; Terence D. Rhodes, of Intermountain Healthcare, Salt Lake City; Gregory J. Riely, MD, PhD, and Adam J. Schoenfeld, MD, of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center; Jacob J. Ripp, DO, and Elizabeth M. Wulff-Burchfield, MD, of University of Kansas Medical Center; Erika Ruiz-Garcia, MD, MSc, and Melissa Valdez-Reyes, MD, of Instituto Nacional de Cancerologia, Mexico; Suki Subbiah, MD, of Stanley S. Scott Cancer Center, LSU, New Orleans; Michael A. Thompson, MD, PhD, of Tempus Labs, Chicago; and Dimpy P. Shah, MD, PhD, of Mays Cancer Center, UT Health, San Antonio, for the COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium.

The research is supported by Vanderbilt Institute for Clinical and Translational Research grant support (UL1 TR000445 from NCATS/NIH); the National Cancer Institute (P30 CA068485); the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institute of Health (2UL1TR001425-05A1; 2KLTR001426-05A1); the Canadian Institute of Health Research Fellowship; the Henry R. Shibata Fellowship; the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada Detweiler Travelling Fellowship; the American Cancer Society and Hope Foundation MRSG-16-01-CCE and P30-CA054174; the National Cancer Institute (5P30CA0506036-31); the Melanoma Research Foundation; NIH T32 Research Training Grant; and the Kuni Foundation Discovery Grant.

About Dana-Farber Cancer Institute 

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute is one of the world’s leading centers of cancer research and treatment. Dana-Farber’s mission is to reduce the burden of cancer through scientific inquiry, clinical care, education, community engagement, and advocacy. We provide the latest treatments in cancer for adults through Dana-Farber Brigham Cancer Center and for children through Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center. Dana-Farber is the only hospital nationwide with a top 10 U.S. News & World Report Best Cancer Hospital ranking in both adult and pediatric care.  

As a global leader in oncology, Dana-Farber is dedicated to a unique and equal balance between cancer research and care, translating the results of discovery into new treatments for patients locally and around the world, offering more than 1,100 clinical trials. 

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