| Literature DB >> 29147288 |
Dexter A Overbay1, Hakan Kaya2, Wayne T Lamoreaux1,2, Robert K Fairbanks2,3, Alexander R Mackay3,4, John J Demakas3,5, Barton S Cook1, Christopher M Lee2,3.
Abstract
Melanoma is a prevalent and particularly aggressive form of skin cancer. Although local disease can be treated well with excision, metastatic extracranial and intracranial disease can be very difficult to treat. Systemic therapies for melanoma have only recently led to statistically significant increases in overall survival with drugs such as Ipilimumab and Vemurafenib. Additionally, melanoma has been classically described as a relatively radio-resistant malignancy. Because of the potential radio-resistance, stereotactic radiosurgery has been widely utilized for intracranial brain metastases and clinical data has revealed excellent rates of local tumor control and tolerability with these highly focused radiation doses.Entities:
Keywords: Giant ventral hernia; Hernia repair; Polypropylene mesh
Year: 2012 PMID: 29147288 PMCID: PMC5649786 DOI: 10.4021/wjon506w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Oncol ISSN: 1920-4531
Metastatic Melanoma Treatments and Effects
| Treatment | Partial response (decrease in tumor size by at least 50%) | Complete response (no tumor detectable) | Overall Response | Median Overall Survival | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biochemotherapy vs. Chemotherapy | 21% vs. 15% | 7% vs. 3.5% | 28% vs. 18.5% | No difference | 2 |
| Interleukin 2 | 10% | 6% | 16% | 11.4 months | 7 |
| Ipilimumab vs. Chemotherapy | 13.6% vs. 9.5% | 1.6% vs. 0.8% | 15.2% vs. 10.3% | 11.2 months vs. 9.1 months | 20 |
| Vemurafenib vs. Chemotherapy | 47% vs. 5% | 1% vs. 0% | 48% vs. 5% | At 6 months: 84% vs. 64% | 22 |