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Recent Advances and Challenges in Uveal Melanoma Immunotherapy

Yihang Fu, Wei Xiao, Yuxiang Mao

2022Cancers63 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

mutations. Although primary UM can be controlled locally, approximately 50% of patients still develop metastases. To date, there have been no standard therapeutic strategies for the prevention or treatment of metastases. Unfortunately, chemotherapy and targeted therapies only induce minimal responses in patients with metastatic UM, with a median survival time of only 4-5 months after metastasis detection. Immunotherapy agents, such as immune checkpoint inhibitors, have achieved pioneering outcomes in CM but have shown limited effects in UM. Researchers have explored several feasible checkpoints to identify options for future therapies. Cancer vaccines have shown little in the way of therapeutic benefit in patients with UM, and there are few ongoing trials providing favorable evidence, but adoptive cell transfer-related therapies seem promising and deserve further investigation. More recently, the immune-mobilizing monoclonal T-cell receptor against the cancer molecule tebentafusp showed impressive antitumor effects. Meanwhile, oncolytic viruses and small molecule inhibitors have also gained ground. This review highlights recent progress in burgeoning treatments and provides innovative insights on feasible strategies for the treatment of UM.

Topics & Concepts

Oncolytic virusMedicineMelanomaNeuroblastoma RAS viral oncogene homologImmunotherapyMalignancyCancerImmune checkpointTargeted therapyGNAQMetastasisClinical trialCancer researchChimeric antigen receptorImmune systemOncologyImmunologyInternal medicineMutationBiologyKRASBiochemistryGeneColorectal cancerOcular Oncology and TreatmentsImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesVirus-based gene therapy research
Recent Advances and Challenges in Uveal Melanoma Immunotherapy | Litcius