Primary malignant melanoma represents the fifth most common cancer in the United States. It is subdivided into two forms: cutaneous (90%), visceral (8%, including ocular and mucosal) and of unknown primary (2%). The vast majority of gastrointestinal melanomas are secondary lesions until proven otherwise. Primary esophageal melanoma in particular is exceedingly rare, less than 200 cases have been documented in the literature to date. It is highly prevalent in Japan and occurs twice as much in men than women around the 6th decade of life. It has a predilection for the middle and lower esophagus, with only 6 cases occurring at the gastroesophageal junction worldwide. Its etiology and pathogenesis are poorly understood, and no curative treatment has been established given the paucity of cases. We present a case of primary melanoma of the gastroesophageal junction which represents the 2nd incident case in the united states and 7th worldwide.
Inhibitors of cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen-4, programmed cell death protein-1, and programmed death-ligand 1 have been shown to produce significant antitumor activity in multiple malignancies, and have become essential oncology standard-of-care therapies. Despite their success, the checkpoint inhibitors' ability to amplify the immune system response against tumor cells has been associated with a unique panel of side effects known as immune-related adverse events. The involvement of the myocardium has been reported previously, but it's remarkably uncommon. Even more noteworthy is that secondary autoimmune myocarditis and heart failure due to these medications are typically fatal.
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