RESUMO
Checkpoint inhibitors are increasingly used to treat patients with gynecologic malignancies and can cause rare and unusual side effects, also known as immunotoxicities, that are rarely observed in patients receiving traditional immunotherapy. If these are not identified and treated, they can cause disability and even death for patients undergoing treatment. This report describes the range of pembrolizumab-induced myasthenia gravis (MG) immunotoxicity through two cases. The first patient is an 85-year-old woman with recurrent vulvar carcinoma who completed two cycles of pembrolizumab. She had a severe presentation leading to respiratory failure. The second patient is an 80-year-old woman with recurrent serous endometrial carcinoma who developed isolated ocular myasthenia after her second cycle of pembrolizumab. The symptoms and physical examination findings described here illustrate the breadth of symptom severity associated with pembrolizumab-induced MG and importance of early identification and treatment to minimize symptoms and improve outcomes.
RESUMO
Discordance between the genetic sex and phenotype seen on ultrasound can identify disorders of sexual development (DSD) that previously escaped detection until puberty. We describe a 46, XY disorder of sexual differentiation caused by a rare mutation in the SF1 gene (OMIM]184757, (NR5A1). The mutation (NR5A1)-c.205C > G (p. Arg69Gly) was discovered after a phenotype-genotype discrepancy was encountered during prenatal care. The baby with 46, XY DSD has female external genitalia but evidence of Y chromosome-related regression of Müllerian structures and the absence of palpable gonads. We discussed the literature on phenotype-genotype discrepancy and the importance of care coordination between the antenatal and postnatal teams to ensure a timely diagnosis of DSD.