Fallen dogmas: recent advances in locoregionally advanced melanoma

Pol Arch Intern Med. 2021 May 25;131(5):464-468. doi: 10.20452/pamw.15936. Epub 2021 Apr 14.

Abstract

Last decade brought new achievements in the melanoma research, which resulted in an important changes in the clinical management of stage III melanoma. The article summarizes recent updates with particular focus on practical aspects. Results from surgical studies, Multicenter Selective Lymphadenectomy Trial II (MSLT-II) and German Dermatologic Cooperative Oncology Group (DeCOG-SLT) proved that surgical dogmatic approach that all sentinel node melanoma metastasis warrants completion lymphadenectomy is no longer valid; omission of completion lymphadenectomy in large proportion of sentinel node positive melanoma patients has no negative impact on survival rates. Moreover oncological trials (COMBI-AD, EORTC 1325/KEYNOTE-054 and CheckMate 238) showed that in stage III melanoma patients' chances of recurrence-free survival can be improved by 10-20% by modern immunotherapy and/or molecular targeted therapy. These findings led to fall of another dogma in oncology: lack of effective adjuvant therapy for stage III melanoma at acceptable toxicity. At the end of the day in 2021 modern multidisciplinary approach incorporating newest findings offer stage III melanoma patients less surgical complications of better tailored surgery and longer survival in result of efficient adjuvant therapy.

Publication types

  • Multicenter Study

MeSH terms

  • Clinical Trials as Topic
  • Combined Modality Therapy
  • Humans
  • Immunotherapy
  • Lymph Node Excision
  • Melanoma* / drug therapy
  • Melanoma* / surgery
  • Skin Neoplasms* / drug therapy
  • Skin Neoplasms* / surgery