Therapeutic advances derived from targeted therapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors can improve melanoma prognosis. Since 2015, cobimetinib has been approved in combination with vemurafenib in the first-line treatment for BRAF-mutated melanoma. For NRAS-mutated melanomas, MEK inhibition seems to be a therapeutic target, and association with checkpoint inhibitor provides a further therapeutic perspective. Infraclinical creatine phosphokinase (CPK) elevation is an MEK inhibitor side effect. We describe a case of focal necrotizing myopathy with 'dropped-head syndrome' induced by cobimetinib, 1 month after its introduction. The clinical presentation comprised interscapular pain, axial fatigue with cervical hypotonia, CPK elevation, intense fluorine-18-fluorodeoxyglucose uptake in cervical muscles, and necrotizing myopathy was confirmed by muscle biopsy. Cobimetinib was temporarily discontinued, resulting in CPK normalization. Re-evaluation showed partial response, motivating continuation of combination therapy with a reduced dose of cobimetinib (40 mg/day). Because prescription of targeted therapies is likely to increase, this adverse event should be known.
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