Abstract
BACKGROUND: It has been reported that immunotherapy with programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) inhibitors (pembrolizumab or nivolumab) can induce multiple eruptive keratoacanthomas (KAs), representing an immune-related cutaneous adverse event (ircAE). METHODS: This case report describes a 63-year-old female with recurrent cervical adenocarcinoma who developed multiple eruptive KAs and a concurrent fungal infection following treatment with the PD-1 inhibitor zimberelimab. We analyzed the etiology, diagnosis, and treatment by integrating clinical manifestations, pathological examinations, previous treatment history, and a review of the literature. RESULTS: Despite an initial misdiagnosis as a fungal infection, multidisciplinary review identified KA as an ircAE. Topical corticosteroids led to resolution, and another PD-1 inhibitor was reintroduced without recurrence of cutaneous toxicity. CONCLUSION: This is the first documented case of eruptive KA linked to zimberelimab, expanding the spectrum of PD-1 inhibitor-associated ircAEs. A concurrent fungal infection obscured the diagnosis, delaying appropriate treatment and highlighting the importance of recognizing rare ircAEs and multidisciplinary collaboration.