TY - JOUR
T1 - Managing in-transit melanoma metastases in the new era of effective systemic therapies for melanoma
AU - Read, Rebecca L.
AU - Thompson, John F.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2019/12/2
Y1 - 2019/12/2
N2 - Introduction: Melanoma in-transit metastases (ITMs) occur between the primary tumor site and the regional node field. Most patients with ITMs have a poor prognosis. The treatment of ITMs can be simple if surgical excision is possible, but challenging when ITMs are advanced, multiple or recurrent and impacting quality of life. Areas covered: The management of ITM is still evolving. Patients who are disease-free after surgical excision of ITMs are today candidates for adjuvant systemic treatment to reduce recurrence risk. Some who have multiple or advanced ITMs may achieve long-term survival or disease control with systemic therapies alone. Those who do not remain candidates for the numerous locoregional therapies used to treat ITMs, including electrocautery, intralesional injection, topical therapy, electrochemotherapy, isolated limb infusion, isolated limb perfusion, radiation therapy and, rarely, amputation. Relevant publications identified in Pubmed and MEDLINE databases are reviewed. Expert opinion: Patients with multiple ITMs can benefit from use of systemic therapies as primary treatment, in the adjuvant setting and in neoadjuvant trials. Multiple alternative treatment modalities exist for patients unsuitable for systemic therapies or in whom systemic therapies have failed. Trials assessing combined systemic and locoregional therapies for ITMs are in progress.
AB - Introduction: Melanoma in-transit metastases (ITMs) occur between the primary tumor site and the regional node field. Most patients with ITMs have a poor prognosis. The treatment of ITMs can be simple if surgical excision is possible, but challenging when ITMs are advanced, multiple or recurrent and impacting quality of life. Areas covered: The management of ITM is still evolving. Patients who are disease-free after surgical excision of ITMs are today candidates for adjuvant systemic treatment to reduce recurrence risk. Some who have multiple or advanced ITMs may achieve long-term survival or disease control with systemic therapies alone. Those who do not remain candidates for the numerous locoregional therapies used to treat ITMs, including electrocautery, intralesional injection, topical therapy, electrochemotherapy, isolated limb infusion, isolated limb perfusion, radiation therapy and, rarely, amputation. Relevant publications identified in Pubmed and MEDLINE databases are reviewed. Expert opinion: Patients with multiple ITMs can benefit from use of systemic therapies as primary treatment, in the adjuvant setting and in neoadjuvant trials. Multiple alternative treatment modalities exist for patients unsuitable for systemic therapies or in whom systemic therapies have failed. Trials assessing combined systemic and locoregional therapies for ITMs are in progress.
KW - Melanoma
KW - adjuvant
KW - in-transit metastasis
KW - locoregional therapy
KW - systemic therapy
KW - treatment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85075174384&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/17512433.2019.1689121
DO - 10.1080/17512433.2019.1689121
M3 - Review article
SN - 1751-2433
VL - 12
SP - 1107
EP - 1119
JO - Expert Review of Clinical Pharmacology
JF - Expert Review of Clinical Pharmacology
IS - 12
ER -