AI Article Synopsis

  • The article reviews the effectiveness of regional chemotherapy, specifically isolated limb infusion (ILI) and isolated limb perfusion (ILP), in treating advanced limb melanoma.
  • Recent findings suggest that while systemic therapies have reduced the need for regional chemotherapy, it still plays a critical role when systemic therapies have undesirable side effects or fail.
  • ILI shows a range of overall response rates (41-91%) and complete response rates (6-39%), while ILP shows higher response rates, making both options valuable for older or at-risk patients with intractable limb disease.

Article Abstract

To review the current role of regional chemotherapy in the management of advanced limb melanoma. Articles reporting the results of isolated limb infusion (ILI) were identified by performing a comprehensive literature search using the PubMed database. Keywords included isolated limb infusion, in-transit melanoma and melphalan. No publication date restrictions were applied. ILI data were compared with those from current systemic therapy clinical trials and the previously reviewed isolated limb perfusion (ILP) literature. Regional chemotherapy is today required in fewer patients because effective systemic therapies now provide an alternative treatment for those who develop extensive local melanoma recurrence or in-transit metastases (ITMs). However, regional chemotherapy may be a valuable treatment option when the side-effects of systemic therapies are of concern, or after systemic treatment failure. ILP achieves overall response rates (ORRs) of 64-100% and complete response rates (CRRs) of 25-89%. ILI achieves ORRs of 41-91% and CRRs of 6-39%. ILP and ILI can have a low risk of serious morbidity. Early results from treatment with ILP or ILI in conjunction with systemic immune therapies suggest that these modalities can be safely combined, which may be useful in patients with refractory limb disease. Regional chemotherapy remains important in the armamentarium of clinicians managing patients with unresectable limb melanoma and may be preferable in those who are frail, elderly or who are at high risk from complications of systemic therapies. The efficacy of combining regional chemotherapy with systemic immune therapy is currently being assessed.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/CMR.0000000000000740DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

regional chemotherapy
24
systemic therapies
16
limb melanoma
12
isolated limb
12
role regional
8
advanced limb
8
systemic
8
effective systemic
8
limb infusion
8
response rates
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!