| Literature DB >> 26171394 |
Anna Niezgoda1, Piotr Niezgoda2, Rafał Czajkowski1.
Abstract
The incidence of malignant melanoma is increasing. The majority of patients are diagnosed in early stages when the disease is highly curable. However, the more advanced or metastatic cases have always been a challenge for clinicians. The poor prognosis for patients with melanoma is now changing as numerous of promising approaches have appeared recently. The discovery of aberrations of pathways responsible for intracellular signal transduction allowed us to introduce agents specifically targeting the mutated cascades. Numerous clinical studies have been conducted to improve effectiveness of melanoma treatment. From 2011 until now, the U.S. FDA has approved seven novel agents, such as BRAF-inhibitors (vemurafenib 2011, dabrafenib 2013), MEK-inhibitors (trametinib 2013), anti-PD1 antibodies (nivolumab 2014, pembrolizumab 2014), anti-CTLA-4 antibody (ipilimumab 2011), or peginterferon-alfa-2b (2011) intended to be used in most advanced cases of melanoma. Nevertheless, clinicians continue working on new possible methods of treatment as resistance to the novel drugs is a commonly observed problem. This paper is based on latest data published until the end of January 2015.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26171394 PMCID: PMC4478296 DOI: 10.1155/2015/851387
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1The time axis presenting dates of FDA (US Food and Drug Administration) and EMA (European Medicines Agency) approval of novel agents for advanced melanoma treatment.
Figure 2Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signalling pathway. MAPK pathway is responsible for differentiation, proliferation, and survival of the cells. Mutations on particular stages of the pathway lead to uncontrolled enhancements of these processes.
Figure 3T-cell activation is a consequence of two simultaneous processes, the expression of protein B7 and antigen presentation by antigen-presenting cells (APCs) to T-cell receptor. The inhibition of activated T-cells occurs as a result of the expression of CTLA-4 and PD-1 receptor on T-cells' surface.
Summary of selected clinical trials of MAPK-targeting agents.
| Phase | Drug Name | Study design | Patient population | No. pts | ORR (%) | PFS (months) | OS (months) | Reference |
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| I | Vemurafenib | Vemurafenib dose-expansion (BRIM-1) | Metastatic melanoma with BRAF V600E mutation | 32 | 81 | 7 | 13.8 | [ |
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| II | Vemurafenib | Vemurafenib (BRIM-2) | Metastatic melanoma with BRAF V600 mutation | 132 | 53 | 6.8 | 15.9 | [ |
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| III | Vemurafenib | Vemurafenib vs Dacarbazine (BRIM-3) | Previously untreated patients with BRAF V600-mutant positive melanoma (stage IIIc/IV) | 675 | 48 vs 5 | 5.3 vs 1.6 | 13.2 vs 9.6 | [ |
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| II | Dabrafenib | Dabrafenib in V600E- vs V600K-mutant pts (BREAK-2) | V600E- and V600K-mutant melanoma | 92 | 59 vs 13 | 6.3 vs 4.5 | 13.1 vs 12.9 | [ |
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| III | Dabrafenib | Dabrafenib vs Dacarbazine (BREAK-3) | Unresectable stage III or IV melanoma with BRAF V600E-mutation | 250 | 50 vs 6 | 5.1 vs 2.7 | NA | [ |
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| III | Trametinib | Trametinib vs Dacarbazine | Stage IIIc or IV melanoma with BRAF V600E/K mutation | 322 | 24 vs 7 | 4.8 vs 1.4 | NA | [ |
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| III | Dabrafenib, Vemurafenib, Trametinib | Dabrafenib + Trametinib vs Vemurafenib | Unresectable or metastatic cutaneous melanoma with BRAF V600E/K mutation | 704 | 64 vs 51 | 11.4 vs 7.3 | 18.3 vs 17.2 | [ |
Summary of selected clinical trials of immunotherapeutic agents for melanoma treatment.
| Phase | Drug Name | Study design | Patient population | No. pts | ORR (%) | PFS (months) | OS (months) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| III | Ipilimumab | Ipilimumab vs Ipilimumab plus GP100 vs GP100 | Previously treated advanced melanoma | 676 | 10.9 vs 5.7 vs 1.5 | 2.86 vs 2.76 vs 2.76 | 10.1 vs 10.0 vs 6.4 | [ |
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| III | Ipilimumab, Dacarbazine | Ipilimumab plus dacarbazine vs dacarbazine | Previously untreated metastatic melanoma | 502 | 15.2 vs 10.3 | NA | 11.2 vs 9.1 | [ |
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| II | Ipilimumab, GM-CSF | Ipilimumab plus GM-CSF vs ipilimumab | Metastatic melanoma | 245 | NA | 3.1 vs 3.1 | 17.5 vs 12.7 | [ |
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| I/II | Tremelimumab | Dose-escalation of tremelimumab | Unresectable stage III or stage IV melanoma | 117 | 9.8 (10 mg/kg) | NA | 9.97 (10 mg/kg), 11.53 (15 mg/kg) | [ |
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| III | Tremelimumab | Tremelimumab vs dacarbazine/temozolomide | Previously untreated stage IIIc or IV melanoma | 655 | 10.7 vs 9.8 | Duration of response: 35.8 vs 13.7 | 12.6 vs 10.7 | [ |
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| II | Nivolumab | Nivolumab | Unresectable stage III or IV melanoma | 90 | 25 | 172 days | Not yet reached | [ |
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| III | Nivolumab, Dacarbazine | Nivolumab vs Dacarbazine | Previously untreated BRAF-mutation positive melanoma | 418 | 40.0 vs 13.9 | 5.1 vs 2.2 | At 1-year 72.9% vs 42.1% | [ |
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| I | Pembrolizumab | Safety/efficacy of three doses | Advanced melanoma | 135 | 38/37 (by IRC) | Over 7 months | Not reached | [ |
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| I | Pembrolizumab | Pembrolizumb 2 mg/kg/10 mg/kg | Refractory melanoma | 173 | 26 | 22/14 weeks | NA | [ |
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| II | Pidilizumab | Pidilizumab 1.5 mg/kg/6 mg/kg | Metastatic melanoma | 103 | 6 | 2.8/1.9 | 1 year: 65% | [ |