Abstract
A 77-year-old woman with lung adenocarcinoma noticed bilateral ptosis 7 weeks after a first pembrolizumab infusion. Her symptoms rapidly progressed to generalized manifestations including limb and neck weakness, dyspnea, and dysphasia within the following two weeks. We diagnosed him with pembrolizumab-related myasthenia gravis and myositis based on clinical symptoms, elevation of muscle enzymes and anti-acetylcholine receptor antibodies, repetitive nerve stimulation and muscle biopsy. We commenced combination immunotherapy, including intravenous and oral steroid therapy, immune absorption therapy and plasma exchange therapy with noninvasive positive-pressure ventilation and tracheotomy positive pressure ventilation. She had gradual symptoms improvement and discharged after 209 days in a hospital. In this case, anti-titin antibodies, one of anti-striational antibodies, was positive and correlated with severity of myasthenia gravis. With the development of immune checkpoint inhibitors for various malignancies, clinicians should closely monitor patients for important immune-related adverse events and coordinate on early treatment.
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Noda, T., Kageyama, H., Miura, M., Tamura, T., & Ito, H. (2019). A case of myasthenia gravis and myositis induced by pembrolizumab. Clinical Neurology, 59(8), 502–508. https://doi.org/10.5692/clinicalneurol.cn-001251
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