4.5 Article

Can an amino acid-based oral rehydration solution be effective in managing immune therapy-induced diarrhea?

Journal

MEDICAL HYPOTHESES
Volume 127, Issue -, Pages 66-70

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.mehy.2019.03.023

Keywords

Immune therapy; Immune checkpoint inhibitors; Adverse events; Diarrhea; Colitis; Enterade; Amino acid; Supportive care

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [P30 CA177558] Funding Source: Medline

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Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICPi) therapy has transformed the way we treat cancer. However, its immune related adverse events (irAEs) can be debilitating and life threatening. Immune therapy-induced diarrhea (ITID) is one of the most commonly encountered irAEs and can lead to expensive and prolonged hospitalizations. The current standard of care for grade 3 or 4 ITID involves ICPi discontinuation, the initiation of steroids, and infliximab for refractory disease. This treatment regimen reverses the desired anti-tumor effect of ICPis, can lead to side effects, and is cost-ineffective. We report the first case of the successful treatment of grade 3 ITID with steroids and an amino acid-based oral rehydration solution (AA-ORS), enterade. Research suggests that AA-ORS may be used to reduce diarrhea and adequately hydrate patients, in contrast to glucose-based oral rehydration solutions, which have been implicated as a contributing factor to diarrhea in cancer patients. We hypothesize that an AA-ORS may mitigate ITID via safer and more economically viable means than the current standard of care, but more controlled trials are needed to test this hypothesis.

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