Abstract Background Immune checkpoint inhibitor-associated acute interstitial nephritis (ICI-AIN) requires a kidney biopsy for a definitive diagnosis. A recent study suggested that 2-deoxy-2-18F fluoro-d-glucose positron emission tomography-computed tomography (F18-FDG PET-CT) may offer a noninvasive alternative, but lack of kidney biopsies in all patients and a proper control group receiving ICI therapy remained important limitations. We conducted the first study addressing these limitations and examined whether PET-CT could differentiate biopsy-proven ICI-AIN from other causes of acute kidney injury (AKI) in patients on ICI therapy. Methods This retrospective cohort study comprises 105 patients on ICI therapy who underwent F18-FDG PET-CT and had a kidney biopsy, along with data from a control group receiving ICIs without AKI. PET-CT scans were performed within 14 days before or 10 days after biopsy, and baseline PET-CTs obtained during ICI therapy before AKI, were reviewed by a blinded nuclear radiologist. Renal cortical standardized uptake values (SUV) were measured in five regions of interest (ROI), liver and blood-pool SUVs served as internal references. Results Thirty-two patients were included (5 ICI-AIN, 7 AKI from other causes, 20 controls). Renal SUVs did not differ significantly among groups. In patients with serial PET-CTs, kidney SUVs tended to increase from baseline to AKI in ICI-AIN, but these changes were not statistically significant. Conclusions In this biopsy-validated cohort, PET-CTs did not reliably distinguish ICI-AIN from other causes of AKI in patients receiving ICI therapy. Larger prospective studies are needed to validate these findings.
Lyrio et al. (Thu,) studied this question.