Recent developments in cancer therapeutics have improved outcomes but have also been associated with cardiovascular complications. Therapies harnessing the immune system have been associated with an immune mediated myocardial injury described as myocarditis. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) are one such therapy with an increasing number of case and cohort reports describing a clinical syndrome of ICI-associated myocarditis. While the full spectrum of ICI-associated cardiovascular disease still needs to be fully defined, described cases of myocarditis range from more "smoldering" to fatal ones. These observations in the clinic setting stand in contrast to outcomes from randomized clinical trials where myocarditis is a rare event that is investigator reported and lacking in a specific case definition. The complexities associated with diagnosis, as well as the heterogeneous clinical presentation of ICI-associated myocarditis, have made ascertainment and identification of myocarditis with high specificity challenging in clinical trials and other data sets, limiting the ability to better understand the incidence, outcomes and predictors of these rare events. Therefore, establishing a uniform definition of myocarditis for application in clinical trials of cancer immunotherapies will enable greater understanding of these events. We propose an operational definition of cancer therapy associated myocarditis characterizing a broad spectrum of disease to facilitate improved case ascertainment and in turn incidence, outcomes and risk factors. Bonaca et al.