| Literature DB >> 32894202 |
Paolo A Ascierto1, Igor Puzanov2, Sanjiv S Agarwala3, Christian Blank4, Richard D Carvajal5, Sandra Demaria6,7, Reinhard Dummer8, Marc Ernstoff9, Soldano Ferrone10, Bernard A Fox11, Thomas F Gajewski12,13, Claus Garbe14, Patrick Hwu15, Roger S Lo16, Georgina V Long17, Jason J Luke18, Iman Osman19, Michael A Postow20, Ryan J Sullivan21, Janis M Taube22, Giorgio Trinchieri23, Hassane M Zarour24, Corrado Caracò25, Magdalena Thurin26.
Abstract
The melanoma treatment landscape changed in 2011 with the approval of the first anti-cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein (CTLA)-4 checkpoint inhibitor and of the first BRAF-targeted monoclonal antibody, both of which significantly improved overall survival (OS). Since then, improved understanding of the tumor microenvironment (TME) and tumor immune-evasion mechanisms has resulted in new approaches to targeting and harnessing the host immune response. The approval of new immune and targeted therapies has further improved outcomes for patients with advanced melanoma and other combination modalities are also being explored such as chemotherapy, radiotherapy, electrochemotherapy and surgery. In addition, different strategies of drugs administration including sequential or combination treatment are being tested. Approaches to overcome resistance and to potentiate the immune response are being developed. Increasing evidence emerges that tissue and blood-based biomarkers can predict the response to a therapy. The latest findings in melanoma research, including insights into the tumor microenvironment and new biomarkers, improved understanding of tumor immune response and resistance, novel approaches for combination strategies and the role of neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapy, were the focus of discussions at the Melanoma Bridge meeting (5-7 December, 2019, Naples, Italy), which are summarized in this report.Entities:
Keywords: Adjuvant; Anti-CTLA-4; Anti-PD-1; BRAF inhibitor; Biomarkers; CAR-T; Combination strategies; Immunotherapy; MEK inhibitor; Melanoma; Neoadjuvant; Target therapy
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32894202 PMCID: PMC7487701 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-020-02482-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1Mechanisms tumors use to resist the immune system: avoided detection, production of inhibitory microenvironment, death resistance
Fig. 2Major pathologic response assessed on biopsy, rather than definitive surgical resection
Fig. 3Biomarker enrichment and biomarker-driven escalation. a Biomarker enrichment (current strategy—PD-L1 in NSCLC). b Biomarker-directed escalation