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Brielle Benyon, Assistant Managing Editor for CURE®, has been with MJH Life Sciences since 2016. She has served as an editor on both CURE and its sister publication, Oncology Nursing News. Brielle is a graduate from The College of New Jersey. Outside of work, she enjoys spending time with family and friends, CrossFit and wishing she had the grace and confidence of her toddler-aged daughter.
Traditionally, desmoplastic melanoma was difficult to treat because the tumor tissue is so dense. However, researchers just discovered that immunotherapy agents have potential in this space.
Desmoplastic melanoma is an unmet need in the oncology field, especially since conventional understanding of the disease assumed that immunotherapy agents would not work because the tumor tissue is so dense.
But new research is finding that anti-PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors can, in fact, play a role in the treatment of desmoplastic melanoma, which makes up about 4 percent of all melanoma cases.
A team of scientists from 10 different cancer centers around the globe — including Moffitt Cancer Center and UCLA – assessed 60 adults with advanced desmoplastic melanoma who received either Keytruda (pembrolizumab) or Opdivo (nivolumab). Forty-two patients (about 70 percent) had a significant response, where their tumor shrunk in size. Even better, 19 of these patients had a complete response and none of them faced recurrence to date.
“Our finding challenge the previous school of thought that immunotherapy would offer little benefit for patients with desmoplastic melanoma due to the dense tissue architecture of these tumors. These tumors in fact have the necessary biological ingredients to be very effective targets for anti-PD-1 drugs,” Zeynep Eroglu, M.D., assistant member of the Cutaneous Oncology Department at Moffitt said in a release.
After profiling desmoplastic melanoma tumors, the researchers discovered that the majority — 14 out of 17 patients – had high mutational activity. Further, when compared to other melanoma types, desmoplastic disease actually had a higher percentage of PD-L1 expression.
Down the road, these findings can have an impact on the way that desmoplastic melanoma is treated, potentially improving what is currently a poor prognosis for many patients. This is an unmet need, with the disease often being resistant to chemotherapy, and it is traditionally thought of as having a lack of targetable mutations.
The studies have paved the way for a new clinical trial to open, which will span across 100 sites across the United States. The study will test the outcomes of pre-surgical Keytruda for patients with desmoplastic melanoma.
If a single-agent immunotherapy regimen, like one using Keytruda or Opdivo, is approved for this patient population, not only will that offer a new option, but it could also give patients the opportunity to dodge some unpleasant side effects.
“Often, combinations of two immunotherapy drugs are used to treat patients with melanoma to try to improve tumor response rates and survival about current reported rates. However, these combinations can lead to significantly higher rate of severe side effects than treatment with anti-PD-1 therapy alone,” Eroglu said. “Our data suggests that single-agent anti-PD-1 therapy may well be sufficient for patients with desmoplastic melanoma, potentially sparing them the increased toxicities generally observed with combinations of immunotherapies.”
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