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Future perspectives in melanoma research: meeting report from the 'Melanoma Bridge': Napoli, December 3rd-6th 2014

Authors :
Ascierto, PA
Atkins, M
Bifulco, C
Botti, G
Cochran, A
Davies, M
Demaria, S
Dummer, R
Ferrone, S
Formenti, S
Gajewski, TF
Garbe, C
Khleif, S
Kiessling, R
Lo, R
Lorigan, P
Mc Arthur, G
Masucci, G
Melero, I
Mihm, M
Palmieri, G
Parmiani, G
Puzanov, I
Romero, P
Schilling, B
Seliger, B
Stroncek, D
Taube, J
Tomei, S
Zarour, HM
Testori, A
Wang, E
Galon, J
Ciliberto, G
Mozzillo, N
Marincola, FM
Thurin, M
Ascierto, PA
Atkins, M
Bifulco, C
Botti, G
Cochran, A
Davies, M
Demaria, S
Dummer, R
Ferrone, S
Formenti, S
Gajewski, TF
Garbe, C
Khleif, S
Kiessling, R
Lo, R
Lorigan, P
Mc Arthur, G
Masucci, G
Melero, I
Mihm, M
Palmieri, G
Parmiani, G
Puzanov, I
Romero, P
Schilling, B
Seliger, B
Stroncek, D
Taube, J
Tomei, S
Zarour, HM
Testori, A
Wang, E
Galon, J
Ciliberto, G
Mozzillo, N
Marincola, FM
Thurin, M
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The fourth "Melanoma Bridge Meeting" took place in Naples, December 3-6th, 2014. The four topics discussed at this meeting were: Molecular and Immunological Advances, Combination Therapies, News in Immunotherapy, and Tumor Microenvironment and Biomarkers. Until recently systemic therapy for metastatic melanoma patients was ineffective, but recent advances in tumor biology and immunology have led to the development of new targeted and immunotherapeutic agents that prolong progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). New therapies, such as mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway inhibitors as well as other signaling pathway inhibitors, are being tested in patients with metastatic melanoma either as monotherapy or in combination, and all have yielded promising results. These include inhibitors of receptor tyrosine kinases (BRAF, MEK, and VEGFR), the phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase (PI3K) pathway [PI3K, AKT, mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)], activators of apoptotic pathway, and the cell cycle inhibitors (CDK4/6). Various locoregional interventions including radiotherapy and surgery are still valid approaches in treatment of advanced melanoma that can be integrated with novel therapies. Intrinsic, adaptive and acquired resistance occur with targeted therapy such as BRAF inhibitors, where most responses are short-lived. Given that the reactivation of the MAPK pathway through several distinct mechanisms is responsible for the majority of acquired resistance, it is logical to combine BRAF inhibitors with inhibitors of targets downstream in the MAPK pathway. For example, combination of BRAF/MEK inhibitors (e.g., dabrafenib/trametinib) have been demonstrated to improve survival compared to monotherapy. Application of novel technologies such sequencing have proven useful as a tool for identification of MAPK pathway-alternative resistance mechanism and designing other combinatorial therapies such as those between BRAF and AKT inhibitors. Improved surviv

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315690474
Document Type :
Electronic Resource