| Literature DB >> 33116365 |
Anastasia Gkiala1, Sotiria Palioura2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To present the molecular mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of conjunctival melanoma (CM) and review the existing literature on targeted molecular inhibitors as well as immune checkpoint inhibitors for the management of locally advanced and metastatic disease.Entities:
Keywords: BRAF inhibitors; BRAF mutations; CTLA4 inhibitors; MEK inhibitors; NRAS mutations; PD1 inhibitors; c-KIT mutations; dabrafenib; immune checkpoint inhibitors; ipilimumab; nivolumab; pembrolizumab; trametinib; vemurafenib
Year: 2020 PMID: 33116365 PMCID: PMC7553763 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S271569
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Figure 1Conjunctival melanoma arising from a pre-existing PAM lesion.
Figure2The molecular mechanisms behind the pathogenesis of conjunctival melanoma. The two main molecular pathways, MAPK and PI3K/AKT/mTOR, transfer extracellular signals and promote proliferation and survival of malignant cells.
Review of Cases Harboring Specific Mutations, Percentage of Mutations Detected and Associated Clinicopathological Factors
| Author | Number of Tested Samples | Mutation | Number of Mutated Samples (%) | Clinicopathological Factors and Concomitant Mutations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gear et al (2004) | 22 | BRAF V600E | 5 (22.7%) | Larger diameter, greater depth of invasion, epithelioid cells |
| Goldenberg-Cohen et al (2005) | 5 | BRAF V600E | 2 (40%) | |
| Beadling et al (2008) | 13 | KIT* | 1 (7.7%) | |
| Lake et al (2011) | 32 | BRAF V600E | 12 (54.5%) | Concomitant TERT promoter mutation, n = 3 |
| Griewank et al (2013) | 78 | BRAF V600E | 21 (27%) | Tumors involving the caruncle and tumors arising from melanocytic nevi |
| BRAF G469A | 1 (1.3%) | |||
| BRAF D594G | 1 (1.3%) | |||
| NRAS Q61R | 6 (7.7%) | Concomitant TERT promoter mutation, n = 3 | ||
| NRAS Q61K | 3 (3.8%) | |||
| NRAS Q61H | 2 (2.6%) | |||
| NRAS Q61L | 2 (2.6%) | |||
| TERT promoter | 12 (15.4%) | |||
| Weber et al (2013) | 1 | BRAF V600E | 1 (100%) | |
| Koopmans et al (2014) | 39 | TERT promoter | 16 (41%) | |
| Larsen et al (2015) | 47 | BRAF V600E | 15 (78.9%) | Younger patients, less common in extrabulbar conjunctiva, rarely seen with PAM, common mixed pigmented or non-pigmented appearance, metastasis more common |
| BRAF V600K | 4 (21.1%) | |||
| Dagiglass et al (2016) | 1 | BRAF V600E | 1 (100%) | |
| Maleka et al (2016) | 1 | BRAF V600E | 1 (100%) | |
| Larsen et al (2016) | 111 | BRAF V600E | 32 (82%) | Male patients, younger age, more frequently in sun‐exposed sites, rarely presented as PAM, frequently presented as a mixed pigmented or non‐pigmented lesion, more frequent nevus origin |
| BRAF V600K | 7 (18%) | |||
| Pinto Torres et al (2017) | 2 | BRAF V600X* | 1 (50%) | |
| Cao et al (2017) | 42 | BRAF V600E | 10 (26%) | |
| Swaminathan et al (2017) | 5 | BRAF V600E | 2 (40%) | Concomitant TERT promoter mutation, n = 1 |
| BRAF V600K | 1 (20%) | |||
| NRAS Q61R | 1 (20%) | Concomitant TERT promoter mutation, n = 1 | ||
| NF1* | 1 (20%) | |||
| Kenawy et al (2018) | 53 tested for BRAF mutations, | BRAF V600E | 15 (28.3%) | More common lymphatic and vascular invasion, frequent involvement of deep and lateral surgical margins |
| BRAF V600K | 2 (3.8%) | |||
| BRAF V600R | 1 (1.9%) | |||
| NRAS Q61X* | 5 (11.1%) | Concomitant BRAF mutation, | ||
| NRAS G12X* | 1 (2.2%) | |||
| Scholz et al (2018) | 63 | NF-1 T60 deletion | 1 (1.6%) | Concomitant BRAF mutation, |
| NF-1 R262C | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 C42Y, G2397R, S2587L | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 S2751N, L552P, G2392E | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 D176E | 2 (3.2%) | |||
| NF-1 L847P, P866S, V1762I | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 C1899Y | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 M1180I, S52F, T60I | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 A2715V, A2208T | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 G2397R, R2517fs | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 I1824fs | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 L1892fs | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 N1451L | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 Q1815n | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 Q756fs | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 R1362n | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 R440n, Q2239n, S1497F, V1393A | 1(1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 S168L | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 S1786n, L1102n, Q1815fs | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NF-1 Y1678fs | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| BRAF V600E | 16 (25%) | |||
| NRAS Q61R | 5 (8%) | |||
| NRAS Q61K | 2 (3%) | |||
| NRAS Q61H | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NRAS Q61L | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NRAS G13D | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| NRAS G12C | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| KRAS G12A | 1 (1.5%) | |||
| Demirci et al (2019) | 8 | BRAF V600E | 1 (12.5%) | |
| NRAS Q61 | 3 (37.5%) | |||
| NF-1 Q1188X* | 1 (12.5%) | |||
| NF-1 R440X* | 1 (12.5%) | |||
| NF-1 M1215K+S15fs | 1 (12.5%) | |||
| El Zaoui et al (2019) | 31 | BRAF V600E | 11 (35.5%) | More common PAM origin |
| Finger and Pavlick (2019) | 5 | BRAF V600K | 1(20%) | |
| NRAS Q61R | 1 (20%) | |||
| Kiyohara et al (2019) | 2 | BRAF V600E | 2 (100%) | |
| Chang et al (2019) | 1 | NRAS* | 1 (100%) | |
| Rossi et al (2019) | 1 | BRAF V600E | 1 (100%) |
Note: *The exact mutation is not reported.
Abbreviations: fs, frameshift mutation; n, nonsense mutation.
Review of Cases, Interventions, and Outcomes of Locally Invasive and Metastatic Conjunctival Melanoma Treated with Targeted Molecular Inhibitors
| Author | Age (Years) | Sex | Clinical Indication | Management | Agent(s) Used | Toxicity | Response | Follow-Up (Months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Griewank et al (2013) | 43 | Male | Metastasis to muscle, lungs, brain | BRAF inhibitor | Dabrafenib | None | Partial | 6 |
| Weber et al (2013) | 45 | Male | Metastasis to lymph nodes, subcutaneous tissue, lungs, bones | BRAF inhibitor | Vemurafenib | None | Mixed* | 2 |
| Dagi Glass et al (2016) | 61 | Female | Locally advanced disease | BRAF/MEK inhibitors, then BRAF inhibitor alone, then anti-PD1, then again BRAF/MEK inhibitors | Dabrafenib/Trametinib, then Vemurafenib, then Pembrolizumab, then | Nausea, vomiting | Nearly complete | 23 |
| Maleka et al (2016) | 53 | Female | Orbital, parotid gland, lung and brain metastasis | BRAF inhibitor | Vemurafenib | Maculopapular rash | Partial | 4 |
| Pinto Torres et al (2017) | 56 | Female | Metastasis to lymph nodes and oropharynx | BRAF inhibitor | Vemurafenib | Arthralgia, diarrhea, skin rash | Complete | 52 |
| Kiyohara et al (2019) | 71 | Male | Local recurrence and metastasis to liver and vertebrae | BRAF inhibitor, then anti-PD1 and BRAF/MEK inhibitors | Vemurafenib, then Nivolumab and Dabrafenib/Trametinib | Erythema multiforme-like eruption, keratinous nodules on chest and scalp | Partial | 30 |
| 72 | Male | Metastasis to lymph nodes | BRAF/MEK inhibitors | Dabrafenib/Trametinib | None | Complete | 6 | |
| Demirci et al (2019) | 70 | Female | Locally advanced disease | BRAF/MEK inhibitors | Dabrafenib/Trametinib | None | Substantial | 15 |
| Rossi et al (2019) | 70 | Male | Metastasis to lymph nodes | BRAF/MEK inhibitors | Dabrafenib/Trametinib | Fever, elevated liver enzymes | Partial | 11 months |
Note: *In this case, the patient experienced initial regression of disease at 1 month, followed by progression at 2 months.
Review of Cases, Interventions, and Outcomes of Locally Invasive and Metastatic Conjunctival Melanoma Treated with Immunotherapy
| Author | Age (Years) | Sex | Clinical Indication | Management | Immunotherapy Agent(s) Used | Toxicity | Response | Follow-Up (Months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chang et al (2019) | 60 | Female | Locally advanced disease and liver metastasis | Combination immunotherapy | Ipilimumab and Nivolumab, then Nivolumab alone, then Pembrolizumab alone | Hepatitis, infusion reaction | Partial | 24 |
| Finger and Pavlick (2018) | 76 | Male | Locally advanced disease | Sequential immunotherapy and topical IFN α2b | Ipilimumab, then Pembrolizumab | Adrenal insufficiency, skin rash | Complete | 36 |
| 94 | Female | Locally advanced disease | Combination immunotherapy | Pembrolizumab and low dose Ipilimumab | None | Partial | 5 | |
| 84 | Female | Locally advanced disease | Combination immunotherapy and intralesional IFN α2b | Pembrolizumab and low dose Ipilimumab | None | Partial | 31 | |
| 76 | Female | Metastasis to lymph nodes, lung, subcutaneous tissue | Sequential immunotherapy | Ipilimumab, then Pembrolizumab | None | Complete | 63 | |
| 72 | Female | Metastasis to lungs, liver, lymph nodes, subcutaneous tissue | Combination immunotherapy | Ipilimumab and Nivolumab | Hepatitis, colitis, pneumonitis | Partial | 33 | |
| Sagiv et al (2018) | 50 | Female | Metastasis to lungs and liver | Single agent immunotherapy | Nivolumab | Hepatitis | Complete | 9 |
| 54 | Female | Metastasis to lung | Single agent immunotherapy | Nivolumab | Colitis | Complete | 12 | |
| 68 | Female | Metastasis to lung and lymph nodes | Sequential immunotherapy and chemotherapy | Pembrolizumab, then Ipilimumab+ Dacarbazine | Hepatitis | Partial, then progression | 13 | |
| 74 | Male | Metastasis to lung | Single agent immunotherapy | Nivolumab | Colitis | Complete | 12 | |
| Ford et al (2017) | 28 | Female | Metastasis to breast, lungs, clavicle, thigh | Single agent immunotherapy | Nivolumab | None | Complete | 36 |
| Kini et al (2017) | 64 | Male | Locally advanced disease | Single agent immunotherapy | Pembrolizumab | None | Complete | 18 |
| Pinto Torres et al (2017) | 51 | Male | Metastasis to lymph nodes and subcutaneous tissue | Single agent immunotherapy | Pembrolizumab | None | Complete | 8 |