| Literature DB >> 31320844 |
Abstract
Melanoma is the most aggressive skin cancer with an increasing number of cases worldwide and curable mostly in its early stage. The improvement in patients' survival in advanced melanoma has been achieved only recently, due to development of new biological drugs for targeted therapies and immunotherapy. Further progress in the treatment of melanoma is clearly dependent on the better understanding of its complex biology. This review describes the most important molecular mechanisms and genetic events underlying skin melanoma development and progression, depicts the way of action of newly developed drugs and indicates new potential therapeutic targets.Entities:
Keywords: BRAF; immunotherapy; melanoma; targeted therapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31320844 PMCID: PMC6627250 DOI: 10.5114/ada.2019.84590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Postepy Dermatol Alergol ISSN: 1642-395X Impact factor: 1.837
Approved or recommended therapies for adjuvant or advanced melanoma treatment – selected clinical results and future perspectives. For more detailed data on clinical trials see review papers [4, 11, 59, 93]
| A. Drugs and therapies | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drug(s) | Target | Objective response rate (ORR) | Median OS | Most common adverse effects (AE) | References |
| Chemotherapy: | |||||
| Hydroxyurea | RNR (ribonucleotide reductase) | 20%, (+ radio-therapy) | – | Bone marrow depression, gastrointestinal symptoms, dermatological reactions | [ |
| Dacarbazine (DTIC) | DNA alkylation | 5–20% | No benefit | Anorexia, nausea, and vomiting | [ |
| Fotemustine | DNA alkylation | 15, 2% | 7.3 months vs. 5.6 months (DTIC) | Neutropenia, thrombocytopenia | [ |
| Targeted therapy: | |||||
| Vemurafenib (BRIM-3 study) | BRAF | 57% | 13.7 months vs. 9.7 months (DTIC) | Cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas/keratoacanthomas, rash, abnormal liver function | [ |
| Dabrafenib (BREAK-2 study) | BRAF | 59% | 13.2 months | Hyperkeratosis, papillomas, hand-foot syndrome, squamous cell carcinomas/keratoacanthomas | [ |
| Trametinib | MEK | 25% | 14.2 months | Rash, diarrhoea, peripheral oedema, pruritus, fatigue | [ |
| Dabrafenib + Trametinib | BRAF, MEK | 69% | 25.1 vs. 18.7 months (dabrafenib) | Pyrexia, chills, diarrhoea, hyperkeratosis, vomiting, peripheral oedema | [ |
| Vemurafenib + Cobimetinib (coBRIM study) | BRAF, MEK | 70% | 22.3 vs. 17.4 months (vemurafenib) | Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhoea, creatine kinase level, retinopathy | [ |
| Immunotherapy: | |||||
| Interleukin-2 (IL-2) | Stimulation of immune system | 16% | 11.4 months | Hypotension, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, confusion, oliguria, thrombocytopenia, fever | [ |
| Ipilimumab | CTLA-4 | 23–32.6% | 8.5––14.3 months | Enterocolitis, hepatitis, dermatitis, diarrhoea, fatigue | [ |
| Nivolumab | PD-1 | 40% | Not reached (41% > 3 years) | Pneumonitis, fatigue, rash, pruritus, diarrhoea, constipation, asthenia, vitiligo | [ |
| Pembrolizumab | PD-1 | 33% | Not reached (74% – 1 year survival) | Fatigue, rash, pruritus, diarrhoea, asthenia, vitiligo, nausea, arthralgia | [ |
| Ipilimumab + Nivolumab | CTLA-4, PD-1 | 58% | Not reached | Rash, pruritus, fatigue, diarrhoea, nausea, vitiligo, hypothyroidism and many others | [ |
| Talimogene laherparepvec (T-Vec) | Local oncolysis, stimulation of immune system | 26.4% | 23.3 vs. 19 months (GM-CSF) | Flu-like syndrome, pyrexia, chills, fatigue, malaise, nausea, localized pain, headache, vitiligo | [ |
| Adjuvant therapies: | |||||
| Interferon α2b | Stimulation of immune system | n.a. | 3.8 vs. 2.8 years | Fever, chill, flew-like symptoms, myelosuppression, hepatotoxicity, neurologic AE | [ |
| Peginterferon α2b | n.a. | RFS: 34.8 vs. 25.5 months | Fatigue, increased alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST), pyrexia, headache, anorexia, myalgia, nausea, chills, and injection site reactions | [ | |
| Ipilimumab | RFS: 26.1 vs. 17.1 months | Rash, pruritus, fatigue, diarrhoea, nausea, abdominal pain, vomiting, headache, weight loss | [ | ||
| Other therapies not approved by the FDA: | |||||
| Imiquimod | Stimulation of immune system | Recommended as treatment options for patients with in-transit melanoma metastases | [ | ||
| Encorafenib, binimetinib, masitinib | BRAF, MEK, C-KIT, respectively | [ | |||
| Epacadostat, Indoximod | IDO1 (indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1) | [ | |||
| Antagonists of other inhibitory receptors on T cells | TIM-3, LAG-3 TIGIT, BTLA | ||||
| Agonists of costimulatory receptors on T cells | CD27 (Varlilumab), OX40, GITR | ||||
| Entinostat | HDAC | ||||
| LEE011 | CDK4/CDK6 | [ | |||
| SAR245409 | PI3K/mTOR | ||||
| BYL719 | PI3K | ||||
| Oncolytic therapies | PV10 (10% Rose Bengal disodium) | [ | |||
| For various combination therapies see [ | |||||
OS – overall survival, RFS – relapse-free survival, n.a. – not applicable.
The main signalling pathways involved in melanoma development
| Signalling pathway (~% cases) | The main proteins and mechanism of activation/suppression | Occurrence (% of cases) | Role in melanoma development | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MAPK (90%) | 50–70% | Proliferation | [ | |
| PI3K/AKT (60%) | PTEN mutation | 5–20% | Proliferation, cell survival | [ |
| RB (100%) | 75% | Cell cycle regulation, senescence and cell death, immortality | [ | |
| TERT (75%) | 74% cell lines analysed | Inhibition of senescence and induction of immortality | [ | |
| P53 (90%) | 30–70% | Impairment of apoptosis, survival | [ | |
| Wnt/β-catenin | – Mutations | – Very rare | Inhibition of senescence, proliferation, invasive growth, cell plasticity, resistance to therapies, immunosuppression | [ |
| MITF | 10% (primary), 21% (metastasis) | Cell proliferation and survival, dedifferentiation | [ | |
| NOTCH | – | 8% metastasis; 40% cell lines – protein inactivation | Cell proliferation and survival, invasiveness | [ |
| STAT3 | – Activation of Src kinase | Most analysed cell lines | Proliferation, survival, angiogenesis immunosuppression, metastasis | [ |
Also in hereditary melanoma.
Figure 1Neoplastic transformation of melanocyte. Upon mutation in BRAF or NRAS gene, melanocyte acquires the ability to sustained proliferation. Subsequent mutation in the promotor of TERT enables the cell to avoid senescence while inhibition of RB and p53 pathways suppresses cell cycle control and apoptosis. At this point melanocyte turns into melanoma cell. Further activation of PI3K/AKT pathway and involvement of other tumour-related proteins (e.g. MITF, WNT, STAT3, NOTCH) regulates such processes as invasive growth, induction of angiogenesis and immunosuppression. Finally, all the aforementioned molecular changes lead to development of aggressive, metastatic melanoma cell
Figure 2Novel therapies for advanced melanoma. Since 2011 eight new drugs have been approved for advanced and disseminated melanoma treatment. They constitute two main therapeutic approaches: targeted therapy and immunotherapy. Targeted drugs are synthetic inhibitors of BRAF or MEK kinases aimed at inhibition of constitutively active MAPK pathway. Four drugs of this kind were approved by the FDA as mono- or combination therapy (vemurafenib, dabrafenib, trametinib and cobimetinib) while two white two other have been approved only in combination (encorafenib and binimetinib). Immunotherapy is mainly based on treatment with antibodies against immune checkpoints on T cells such as CTLA4 (ipilimumab) and PD-1 (nivolumab and pembrolizumab). A few new drugs of this kind (including inhibitors of PD-L1) are being tested in clinical trials. Immunotherapy also involved treatment with genetically modified oncolytic virus (Talimogene laherparepvec, T-VEC) dedicated to treat regional and cutaneous metastasis