Chemotherapy in Cutaneous Melanoma: Is There Still a Role?
- PMID: 36988735
- PMCID: PMC10164011
- DOI: 10.1007/s11912-023-01385-6
Chemotherapy in Cutaneous Melanoma: Is There Still a Role?
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.
Keywords: Chemotherapy; Immune checkpoint inhibitor; Melanoma; Targeted therapy.
© 2023. The Author(s).
Conflict of interest statement
Ines P. da Silva had travel support by BMS and MSD and speaker fee by Roche, BMS and MSD. Reinhard Dummer has intermittent, project-focused consulting and/or advisory relationships with Novartis, Merck Sharp & Dohme (MSD), Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS), Roche, Amgen, Takeda, Pierre Fabre, Sun Pharma, Sanofi, Catalym, Second Genome, Regeneron, Alligator, T3 Pharma, MaxiVAX SA, Pfizer and touchIME outside the submitted work. James P. Pham, Anthony M. Joshua and Simone M. Goldinger declare no competing interests.
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