Galician Medical Journal (Sep 2023)

A Case of Delayed Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Hepatitis in a Patient with Malignant Melanoma

  • Dayna Telken,
  • Nael Haddad,
  • Victor Arce Gutierrez,
  • Donald Tschirhart,
  • Yasmin Alishahi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.21802/e-GMJ2023-A01
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 4

Abstract

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Immune checkpoint inhibitors are an increasingly utilized class of medications in oncology. Significant adverse effects have been reported, including hepatitis which mostly occurs early after initiating treatment. We present a case of a 78-year-old male with past medical history of recurrent sinusoidal mucosal malignant melanoma on pembrolizumab for three years that presented with painless jaundice of 72-hour duration. Laboratory evaluation demonstrated alkaline phosphatase at 1780 IU/L, aspartate aminotransferase at 2290 IU/L, alanine aminotransferase at 1224 IU/L, and bilirubin of 10.0 mg/dL with direct bilirubin of 7.4 mg/dL. The patient underwent interventional radiology transjugular liver biopsy demonstrating features of drug-induced liver injury secondary to pembrolizumab therapy. He was started on steroid therapy and completed six-week course with resolution in liver enzymes. This is a unique case in which pembrolizumab-induced hepatitis occurred three years after initiation of treatment. Due to the increased use of immune checkpoint inhibitors for oncologic treatment, it is important for clinicians to recognize their immune-related adverse effects and varying timing in which these toxicities may occur.

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