Pembrolizumab-induced autoimmune side effects of colon and pancreas in a patient with lung cancer.

2021 
Immune checkpoint inhibitors have been shown to be effective for treating many carcinomas. However, the activated immune response may lead to the development of multiple immune-related adverse events, including rare immune-mediated inflammation due to autoimmune mechanisms. An 82-year-old man was diagnosed with large cell lung cancer (T1aN3M1 stage IVB) and was treated with inhibitors of the programmed cell death receptor-1, pembrolizumab. Diarrhea and melena occurred after six doses of pembrolizumab, and colonoscopy revealed mucosal inflammation of the rectum and sigmoid colon in a continuous manner, resembling the typical endoscopic findings of ulcerative colitis. Subsequently, fever and hyperamylasemia appeared, and the patient was diagnosed with pancreatitis resembling type 2 autoimmune pancreatitis on imaging tests and cytological examination, which showed infiltration of inflammatory cells, mainly neutrophils. Steroid therapy was administered and both, colitis and pancreatitis markedly improved. Here, we present a patient who developed colitis and pancreatitis after ICI treatment for advanced lung cancer. Both are thought to be due to autoimmune side effects of pembrolizumab. Although pancreatitis is a rare irAE, clinicians should be aware of the development of pancreatitis, especially in the case of irAE colitis resembling ulcerative colitis.
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