If we treat everyone the same way one question remains: what is the toxicity that we impose on our patients? The most common treatment-related adverse events ≥ 20% in KEYNOTE-522 in both arms were nausea, alopecia, anemia, neutropenia, fatigue, or diarrhea—all known as typical chemotherapy-associated. The most common immune-mediated adverse events were infusion reactions, hypothyroidism, severe skin reactions, hyperthyroidism, adrenal insufficiency, or pneumonitis [
8]. Most adverse events can be treated successfully with corticosteroids. Nonetheless, chronic or irreversible toxicity might be more common than initially thought and can lead to the need of permanent hormone replacement therapy. Especially hypophysitis, thyroiditis, and adrenal insufficiency have the highest probability to develop into chronic toxicity [
9]. However, some of the immune-related adverse events can end fatally which, therefore, has to be taken into account when informing our patients. Myocarditis, myositis, neurologic toxicity, or pneumonitis which rarely occur have the highest fatality rates [
10].