Is there an overtreatment of melanoma patients at the end of their life? Results of a multicenter study on 193 melanoma patients

J Dtsch Dermatol Ges. 2021 Sep;19(9):1297-1305. doi: 10.1111/ddg.14501. Epub 2021 Aug 6.

Abstract

Background and objectives: There is a lack of data regarding the situation of melanoma patients receiving systemic therapies in their last months of life.

Patients and methods: All melanoma patients who died in 2016 or 2017 and who had been treated by systemic therapies within the last three months of life were retrospectively analyzed. The study was conducted within the Committee "supportive therapy" of the Work Group Dermatological Oncology (ADO).

Results: 193 patients from four dermato-oncological centers were included. More than 60 % of the patients had ECOG ≥ 2 and most of them received immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) or targeted therapies (TT). 41 patients benefited from the last therapy in terms of radiological and laboratory findings or state of health. Although ECOG was worse in the TT cohort compared to the ICI group, the proportion of patients benefiting from the last therapy with TT was significantly higher and TT therapy could be carried out more often on an outpatient basis.

Conclusions: This study indicates that there is a tendency towards an overtreatment at the end of life. Nevertheless, TT might be a reasonable therapeutic option for advanced BRAF mutant melanoma, even in highly palliative situations.

Publication types

  • Multicenter Study
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors
  • Medical Overuse
  • Melanoma* / drug therapy
  • Melanoma* / therapy
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Skin Neoplasms* / drug therapy
  • Skin Neoplasms* / therapy

Substances

  • Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors