Mayo Clinic reports new option for patients with metastatic melanomaJanuary 04, 2006Patients with metastatic melanoma (MM) have new hope, says a recently published study by Mayo Clinic Cancer Center. The study, which shows the combination of paclitaxel and carboplatin (PC) appears to be effective for MM when traditional treatments have failed, is in this month's issue of Cancer. "Melanoma is unfortunately one of the few cancers that has become more common over the last few decades, and when it becomes metastatic, there are very few treatment options," says Ravi Rao, M.B.B.S., Mayo Clinic oncologist and lead investigator of the study. "This is a good step towards better treating this cancer. We hope to continue to find treatment options that extend and improve life expectancy for patients." This study appears to have found one such option, with nearly half of the patients that received PC experiencing a clinical benefit of stable disease (19 percent) or tumor size reduction (26 percent). The National Cancer Institute reports a 2.4 percent increase in the incidence of melanoma between 1992 and 2002. New cases are diagnosed in about 60,000 people each year in the United States, and almost 8,000 die because of metastasized melanoma. Because they know that most therapies provide palliative as opposed to curative options, researchers at Mayo Clinic Cancer Center consider developing more effective curative treatment options to be a priority. Dr. Rao and his co-investigators examined the records of 31 MM patients at Mayo Clinic who were treated with the PC combination between March 2003 and January 2005. These patients had previously received (and failed) an average of two treatments, including vaccine/immunotherapy. Interestingly, the researchers found that this combination benefited even those patients in whom temozolomide (currently the most commonly used chemotherapy drug for melanoma) failed. Because the data was collected from the records of patients treated previously and was not part of a set treatment regimen, the schedule and dosage of PC varied. However, the researchers believe that using the drugs weekly (compared to once every three weeks) makes the combination more tolerable, and the researchers prefer that option. "Other recent studies in the U.S. and Germany looking at combinations that included PC, indicated that there is some clinical benefit from this combination," says Dr. Rao. "Combined with our results, we believe that the PC combination truly has a beneficial role, especially for patients who've had poor results from other treatment options. "However, this study is retrospective in nature, and further studies are needed to fully understand the impact of this combination on the survival of patients with metastatic melanoma,\\\ Mayo Clinic |
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| Related Metastatic Melanoma Current Events and Metastatic Melanoma News Articles NIH study reveals new genetic culprit in deadly skin cancer Drawing on the power of DNA sequencing, National Institutes of Health researchers have identified a new group of genetic mutations involved in the deadliest form of skin cancer, melanoma. Researchers Identify New Method to Selectively Kill Metastatic Melanoma Cells An international team of researchers has identified a new method for selectively killing metastatic melanoma cells, which may lead to new areas for drug development in melanoma - a cancer that is highly resistant to current treatment strategies. Study shows cancer vaccines led to long-term survival for patients with metastatic melanoma Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian today announced promising data from a clinical study showing patient-specific cancer vaccines derived from patients' own cancer cells and immune cells were well tolerated and resulted in impressive long-term survival rates in patients with metastatic melanoma whose disease had been minimized by other therapies. Vaccine shows therapeutic promise against advanced melanoma A vaccine for one of the most lethal cancers, advanced melanoma, has shown improved response rates and progression-free survival for patients when combined with the immunotherapy drug, Interleukin-2. Scientists create mouse model of melanoma that generates hope for the use of targeted therapies Researchers have developed a new mouse model that allows them to replicate normal pigment cells at the earliest stages of conversion to malignant skin cancer in humans. Vegetable-based drug could inhibit melanoma Compounds extracted from green vegetables such as broccoli and cabbage could be a potent drug against melanoma, according to cancer researchers. Tests on mice suggest that these compounds, when combined with selenium, target tumors more safely and effectively than conventional therapy. IL-2 immunotherapy fails to benefit HIV-infected individuals already taking antiretrovirals Providing a synthetic form of the immune system protein interleukin-2 (IL-2) to HIV-infected individuals already taking combination antiretroviral therapy boosts their numbers of CD4+ T cells, the key white blood cells destroyed by HIV, but fails to reduce their risk of HIV-associated opportunistic diseases or death compared with combination antiretroviral therapy alone. NYU Langone Medical Center researchers find micro RNA plays a key role in melanoma metastasis Scientists have long wondered how melanoma cells travel from primary tumors on the surface of the skin to the brain, liver and lungs, where they become more aggressive, resistant to therapy, and deadly. NYU researchers demonstrate activity of mebendazole in metastatic melanoma Researchers at the NYU Cancer Institute and the Ronald O. Perelman Department of Dermatology have identified mebendazole, a drug used globally to treat parasitic infections, as a novel investigational agent for the treatment of chemotherapy-resistant malignant melanoma. OHSU Cancer Instutute researchers find abnormalities in gene for melanoma New research from the Oregon Health & Science University Cancer Institute about mutations in melanoma may bring a wellspring of hope to many patients. More Metastatic Melanoma Current Events and Metastatic Melanoma News Articles |
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