| Literature DB >> 31382909 |
Hikaru Kamo1, Taku Hatano2, Kazuaki Kanai1,3, Nozomi Aoki1, Daiki Kamiyama1, Kazumasa Yokoyama1, Masashi Takanashi1, Yuri Yamashita1, Yasushi Shimo1,4, Nobutaka Hattori1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pembrolizumab is an immune-checkpoints inhibitor that enhances the immune response against cancer cells and therefore is useful for the treatment of several carcinomas. However, pembrolizumab sometimes perturbs the immune system resulting in various autoimmune neurological complications. In this situation, autoimmune myositis due to pembrolizumab is a rare but not-negligible complication. Here, we report two cases of autoimmune myositis due to pembrolizumab, with systemic myositis involving levator palpebrae superioris, extraocular and hindneck muscles. CASEEntities:
Keywords: ICPIs-related systemic myositis; Immune-related adverse events; Myasthenia gravis; Necrotizing myositis; Ocular myositis; Pembrolizumab
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31382909 PMCID: PMC6681482 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-019-1416-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1Ptosis, eye movements and muscle MRI in case 1. On admission, case 1 exhibited bilateral ptosis (a), and restricted eye movements, particularly for upward gaze (b). Hyperintense signal and enhancement on short T2 inversion recovery (STIR) in bilateral orbicularis oculi muscle: coronal view (c) and axial view (d), brachial muscle (e) and femoral muscle (f). Yellow arrows indicate inflammation changes in muscles
Fig. 2Ptosis, eye movements, muscle MRI and pathological findings in case 2. On admission, case 2 exhibited bilateral ptosis (Above). After treatment, ptosis was improved (Below) (a). Restriction of eye movements on admission (b). Hyperintense signal and enhancement on short T2 inversion recovery (STIR) in bilateral orbicularis oculi muscle: coronal view (c) posterior cervical muscle (d), and brachial muscle (e). Yellow arrow indicates inflammation change. Muscle biopsy shows muscle fiber necrosis and regeneration with sparse inflammatory infiltrate with hematoxylin and eosin staining. (f, g)
Pembrolizumab induces systemic myositis presenting as ocular myositis
| Our case 1 | Our case 2 | Case1 [ | Case2 [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 78 | 72 | 78 | 86 |
| Sex | M | F | M | F |
| Carcinoma | pelvis and ureter cancer | lung cancer | metastatic melanoma | metastatic melanoma |
| Myositis symptom onset | 7 days after second injection | 2 weeks after second injection | 2 weeks after second injection | 4 days after second injection |
| Initial symptom | ptosis | back pain, right-sided ptosis and weakness of neck | bulbar weakness | fatigue, left ptosis and ophthalmoplegia |
| CK (IU/L) at the 1st visit | 6416 | 1603 | 1284 | 1499 |
| EMG finding | myogenic change | myogenic change | myogenic change | myogenic change |
| Serum antibody | PM-Scl 75, SRP | negative | negative | negative |
| Anti-AChR antibody | negative | negative | negative | negative |
| MG overlap | – | – | – | – |
| Pathology | – | necrotizing myositis | necrotizing myositis | necrotizing myositis |
| Initial treatment | IVMP | IVMP | PSL 1 mg/kg/day | IVMP |
| Second treatment | PLEX | Oral PSL | PLEX | PLEX |
| Outcome | dead due to cancer | complete clinical recovery | dead due to respiratory weakness | complete clinical recovery |
AChR acetylcholine receptor, CK creatine kinase, IVMP intravenous methylprednisolone, N.A. not available, PLEX plasma exchange, PSL prednisolone, SRP signal recognition particle