Non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis and intraventricular small-vessel thromboembolic occlusion mimicking immune checkpoint inhibitor myocarditis in a patient treated with pembrolizumab: a case report
European Heart Journal - Case Reports

Abstract
Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have revolutionized cancer treatment and are increasingly associated with cardiovascular toxicities, including myocarditis and accelerated atherosclerosis. While ICI myocarditis has received substantial attention, thrombotic complications remain underrecognized and may be difficult to distinguish from immune-mediated cardiac inflammation and cancer-related hypercoagulable state. We present a case of non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis (NBTE) and myocardial microthrombi mimicking ICI myocarditis.
A 76-year-old woman with metastatic adenosquamous lung carcinoma presented with progressive dyspnoea 3 weeks after initiating pembrolizumab. Pulmonary arterial and coronary imaging were unremarkable, but cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) and myocardial oedema suggestive of ICI myocarditis. Chest computed tomography revealed inflammatory lung changes, and empirical corticosteroids were initiated with initial clinical improvement. One week later, brain MRI showed multifocal infarcts, and Doppler ultrasound identified bilateral lower extremity deep vein thromboses. Transoesophageal echocardiography showed thickened mitral and aortic valves with moderate regurgitation. Non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis with embolic phenomena was suspected. Anticoagulation was escalated from apixaban to therapeutic enoxaparin, followed by warfarin. Despite initial stabilization, the patient died 2 months later. Post-mortem examination revealed fibrin-rich valvular vegetations consistent with NBTE, widespread intramyocardial thrombi, and no histopathologic evidence of myocarditis.
This case underscores how microthrombotic complications of ICI therapy may closely mimic myocarditis on imaging. Nonspecific cardiac MRI findings, such as LGE and T2 signal elevation, can result from thrombotic or ischaemic injury alike. Histopathologic confirmation may be required for accurate diagnosis, as misclassification can lead to suboptimal treatment.
Contributors

Agata Sularz
Author

Jordan A Holthe
Author

Jeffrey B Geske
Author

Melanie C Bois
Author

John P Bois
Author

Golnaz Houshmand
Author

Sarandeep Kaur Marwaha
Author

Alessandro Palmieri
Author

Ugur Canpolat
Author

Deepti Ranganathan
Author

