Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) activate the immune system against cancer and have become standard of care for many cancers. With increased ICI use, their toxicities known as immune-related adverse events (irAEs) are becoming more common, but it is unclear how prepared relevant clinicians feel to diagnose and treat irAEs. The objective of this study was to assess irAE knowledge, confidence, and experience among generalists and oncology clinicians to guide future curricular interventions related to irAEs. A 25-item survey with questions assessing knowledge, experience level, confidence, and resource utilization regarding irAE diagnosis and management was sent to University of Chicago-affiliated (UChicago) internal medicine residents and hospitalists (inpatient irAE management) along with UChicago oncology fellows, attendings, nurse practitioners (NPs), and physician assistants (PAs) (inpatient and outpatient) as well as Chicago community oncologists (outpatient) in June 2022. Overall response rate was 37% (171/467). Knowledge scores averaged below 70% for all clinicians. "No idea" responses were most common with knowledge questions on steroid-sparing agent use and ICI use for patients with preexisting autoimmune disease. IrAE experience correlated with higher knowledge for oncology attendings (p = 0.015) and hematology/oncology NPs/PAs (p = 0.031). IrAE experience correlated with higher confidence for residents (p = 0.026), oncology fellows (p = 0.047), and hematology/oncology NPs/PAs (p = 0.042). Most commonly utilized resources were colleagues and UpToDate, and most clinicians were very likely to use online resources in the future. Knowledge and confidence gaps exist, and they were somewhat mitigated by experience. Future irAE curricula can fill these needs through online role-specific resources: irAE identification for generalists versus irAE identification and management for oncologists.
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