| Literature DB >> 28086948 |
Aurélien Simon1, Hampig Raphael Kourie2, Joseph Kerger1.
Abstract
Metastatic melanoma has long been considered to have a very poor prognosis and to be chemo-resistant. However, a subgroup of patients with metastatic melanoma presents remarkable responses to chemotherapeutic agents, even in the absence of a response to modern targeted therapies and immunotherapies; accordingly, determining predictive biomarkers of the response to chemotherapies for metastatic melanoma remains a priority to guide treatment in these patients. We report a case study of a patient with B-Raf proto-oncogene serine/threonine kinase-mutated metastatic melanoma harbouring many genetic mutations. The patient did not respond to prior targeted therapies or immunotherapies but experienced a dramatic objective radiological and clinical response to subsequent dacarbazine-based chemotherapy. In the era of targeted therapies and immunotherapies for metastatic melanoma, cytotoxic chemotherapies may still represent an interesting therapeutic weapon in a well-defined subgroup of patients presenting with specific genetic and molecular features.Entities:
Keywords: ATM mutation; Checkpoint inhibitors; Chemosensitivity; Chemotherapy; Immunotherapy; Metastatic melanoma; Vemurafenib
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28086948 PMCID: PMC5237156 DOI: 10.1186/s40880-017-0179-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chin J Cancer ISSN: 1944-446X
Fig. 1Computed tomography (CT) and macroscopic images of the inguinal lesion before and after 3 cycles of chemotherapy. a CT scan shows a subcutaneous metastatic melanoma lesion (arrow) of 76 mm × 63 mm in the left inguinal area before chemotherapy. b Cutaneous metastatic melanoma lesions (arrow) were nodular and inflammatory before chemotherapy. c CT scan shows that the size of the subcutaneous metastatic melanoma lesion (arrow) decreased to 31 mm × 35 mm, with a reduction of 48%, after 3 cycles of chemotherapy. d Cutaneous metastatic melanoma lesions (arrow) exhibited massive shrinkage, leaving a fibrotic quality of the skin, after 3 cycles of chemotherapy
Fig. 2Flow chart summarizing the treatment provided to this patient