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Immunotherapy in the Treatment of Metastatic Melanoma: Current Knowledge and Future Directions

Massimo Ralli, Andrea Botticelli, Irene Claudia Visconti, Diletta Angeletti, Marco Fiore, Paolo Marchetti, Alessandro Lambìase, Marco de Vincentiis, Antonio Greco

2020Journal of Immunology Research239 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Melanoma is one of the most immunologic malignancies based on its higher prevalence in immune-compromised patients, the evidence of brisk lymphocytic infiltrates in both primary tumors and metastases, the documented recognition of melanoma antigens by tumor-infiltrating T lymphocytes and, most important, evidence that melanoma responds to immunotherapy. The use of immunotherapy in the treatment of metastatic melanoma is a relatively late discovery for this malignancy. Recent studies have shown a significantly higher success rate with combination of immunotherapy and chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or targeted molecular therapy. Immunotherapy is associated to a panel of dysimmune toxicities called immune-related adverse events that can affect one or more organs and may limit its use. Future directions in the treatment of metastatic melanoma include immunotherapy with anti-PD1 antibodies or targeted therapy with BRAF and MEK inhibitors.

Topics & Concepts

ImmunotherapyMelanomaMedicineMalignancyMetastatic melanomaRadiation therapyIpilimumabOncologyImmune systemTargeted therapyChemotherapyImmunologyAntigenInternal medicineCancer researchCancerCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesCAR-T cell therapy research
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