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Chemotherapy in Cutaneous Melanoma: Is There Still a Role?

James P. Pham, Anthony M. Joshua, Inês Pires da Silva, Reinhard Dummer, Simone M. Goldinger

2023Current Oncology Reports54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: In the preceding decade, the management of metastatic cutaneous melanoma has been revolutionised with the development of highly effective therapies including immune checkpoint inhibitors (specifically CTLA-4 and PD-1 inhibitors) and targeted therapies (BRAF and MEK inhibitors). The role of chemotherapy in the contemporary management of melanoma is undefined. RECENT FINDINGS: Extended analyses highlight substantially improved 5-year survival rates of approximately 50% in patients with metastatic melanoma treated with first-line therapies. However, most patients will progress on these first-line treatments. Sequencing of chemotherapy following failure of targeted and immunotherapies is associated with low objective response rates and short progression-free survival, and thus, meaningful benefits to patients are minimal. Chemotherapy has limited utility in the contemporary management of cutaneous melanoma (with a few exceptions, discussed herein) and should not be the standard treatment sequence following failure of first-line therapies. Instead, enrolment onto clinical trials should be standard-of-care in these patients.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMelanomaChemotherapyOncologyImmunotherapyMetastatic melanomaInternal medicineClinical trialFirst lineStandard of careTargeted therapyIpilimumabIntensive care medicineDermatologyCancerCancer researchMelanoma and MAPK PathwaysCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersCAR-T cell therapy research
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