Dummer Reinhard, Schadendorf Dirk, Ascierto Paolo A, Larkin James, Lebbé Celeste, Hauschild Axel
aDepartment of Dermatology, University Hospital Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland bDepartment of Dermatology, University Hospital Essen, Essen cDepartment of Dermatology, University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein, Kiel, Germany dIstituto Nazionale Tumori Fondazione 'G. Pascale', Naples, Italy eRoyal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK fAPHP Oncodermatology Unit, University Paris 7 Diderot U976, Paris, France.
Melanoma Res. 2015 Dec;25(6):461-9. doi: 10.1097/CMR.0000000000000200.
Melanoma remains a serious form of skin cancer in Europe and worldwide. Localized, early-stage melanomas can usually be treated with surgical excision. However, the prognosis is poorer for patients with advanced disease. Before 2011, treatment for advanced melanoma included palliative surgery and/or radiotherapy, and chemotherapy with or without immunotherapy, such as interleukin-2. As none of these treatments had shown survival benefits in patients with advanced melanoma, European guidelines had recommended that patients be entered into clinical trials. The lack of approved first-line options and varying access to clinical trials meant that European clinicians relied on experimental regimens and chemotherapy-based treatments when no other options were available. Since 2011, ipilimumab, an immuno-oncology therapy, and vemurafenib and dabrafenib, targeted agents that inhibit mutant BRAF, have been approved by the European Medicines Agency for the treatment of advanced melanoma. More recently, the MEK inhibitor, trametinib, received European marketing authorization for use in patients with BRAF mutation-positive advanced melanoma. In 2014, the anti-PD-1 antibody nivolumab was approved as a first-line therapy in Japan. Whereas nivolumab and another anti-PD-1 antibody, pembrolizumab, were approved as second-line therapies in the USA, their recent approval in Europe are for first-line use based on new clinical trial data in this setting. Together these agents are changing clinical practice and making therapeutic decisions more complex. Here, we discuss current and emerging therapeutic options for the first-line treatment of advanced melanoma, and how these therapies can be optimized to provide the best possible outcomes for patients.
在欧洲乃至全球,黑色素瘤仍是一种严重的皮肤癌。局限性早期黑色素瘤通常可通过手术切除进行治疗。然而,晚期患者的预后较差。2011年之前,晚期黑色素瘤的治疗方法包括姑息性手术和/或放疗,以及联合或不联合免疫疗法(如白细胞介素-2)的化疗。由于这些治疗方法均未显示出对晚期黑色素瘤患者有生存益处,欧洲指南建议患者参加临床试验。缺乏获批的一线治疗方案以及参与临床试验的机会各异,这意味着欧洲临床医生在没有其他选择时,只能依赖实验性方案和基于化疗的治疗方法。自2011年以来,免疫肿瘤疗法伊匹木单抗以及抑制突变BRAF的靶向药物维莫非尼和达拉非尼已获欧洲药品管理局批准用于治疗晚期黑色素瘤。最近,MEK抑制剂曲美替尼获得欧洲上市许可,用于治疗BRAF突变阳性的晚期黑色素瘤患者。2014年,抗PD-1抗体纳武单抗在日本被批准作为一线治疗药物。纳武单抗和另一种抗PD-1抗体帕博利珠单抗在美国被批准作为二线治疗药物,而它们最近在欧洲获批用于一线治疗是基于该情况下的新临床试验数据。这些药物共同改变着临床实践,也使治疗决策变得更加复杂。在此,我们讨论晚期黑色素瘤一线治疗的当前及新出现的治疗选择,以及如何优化这些疗法以为患者提供尽可能好的治疗效果。