Cutaneous adverse effects of tebentafusp
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Synopsis
Cutaneous adverse events are among the most frequent toxicities of tebentafusp, occurring in approximately 80%-90% of patients. In a phase 3 trial, treated patients experienced rash (83%), pruritus (69%), erythema (29%), and edema (20%). These reactions typically began within hours of the first infusion and were most prominent during the first 3 to 4 weeks of therapy, with incidence and severity decreasing with subsequent doses. Histologic analyses confirm that rash represents an on-target, off-tumor immune response, driven by CD8⁺ T-cell infiltration and destruction of gp100-expressing melanocytes, rather than a hypersensitivity reaction. In a prospective cohort of 33 patients, skin toxicity occurred in 78.8% and included symmetrical erythematous patches (83.8%), hemorrhagic macules (11.8%), urticarial lesions (7.4%), and bullous lesions (1.5%).
Most cutaneous events are grade 1-2, although up to 18% may reach grade 3-4 severity. Events are typically self-limited, improve after the first few cycles, and rarely require treatment discontinuation.
Pigmentary changes are delayed effects of tebentafusp therapy, typically arising after several weeks to months. In a large phase 3 trial, depigmentation or hypopigmentation was reported in about 27% of patients, whereas hyperpigmentation occurred in 11%. In contrast, a smaller prospective cohort of 33 patients reported vitiligo-like depigmentation in 8.5% and leukotrichia in 11.4%.
Depigmentation, reflecting direct melanocyte loss, occurs in approximately 27% of patients, whereas hyperpigmentation resulting from postinflammatory changes, is seen in about 11%.
To date, no cases of toxic epidermal necrolysis, drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms, or other life-threatening cutaneous emergencies have been attributed to tebentafusp.
Codes
L27.0 – Generalized skin eruption due to drugs and medicaments taken internally
SNOMEDCT:
28926001 – Eruption caused by drug
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Last Updated:09/22/2025
