Cargando…
Future perspectives in melanoma research: meeting report from the “Melanoma Bridge”: Napoli, December 3rd–6th 2014
The fourth “Melanoma Bridge Meeting” took place in Naples, December 3–6th, 2014. The four topics discussed at this meeting were: Molecular and Immunological Advances, Combination Therapies, News in Immunotherapy, and Tumor Microenvironment and Biomarkers. Until recently systemic therapy for metastat...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
BioMed Central
2015
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4665874/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26619946 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12967-015-0736-1 |
_version_ | 1782403629247889408 |
---|---|
author | Ascierto, Paolo A. Atkins, Michael Bifulco, Carlo Botti, Gerardo Cochran, Alistair Davies, Michael Demaria, Sandra Dummer, Reinhard Ferrone, Soldano Formenti, Silvia Gajewski, Thomas F. Garbe, Claus Khleif, Samir Kiessling, Rolf Lo, Roger Lorigan, Paul Arthur, Grant Mc Masucci, Giuseppe Melero, Ignacio Mihm, Martin Palmieri, Giuseppe Parmiani, Giorgio Puzanov, Igor Romero, Pedro Schilling, Bastian Seliger, Barbara Stroncek, David Taube, Janis Tomei, Sara Zarour, Hassane M. Testori, Alessandro Wang, Ena Galon, Jérôme Ciliberto, Gennaro Mozzillo, Nicola Marincola, Francesco M. Thurin, Magdalena |
author_facet | Ascierto, Paolo A. Atkins, Michael Bifulco, Carlo Botti, Gerardo Cochran, Alistair Davies, Michael Demaria, Sandra Dummer, Reinhard Ferrone, Soldano Formenti, Silvia Gajewski, Thomas F. Garbe, Claus Khleif, Samir Kiessling, Rolf Lo, Roger Lorigan, Paul Arthur, Grant Mc Masucci, Giuseppe Melero, Ignacio Mihm, Martin Palmieri, Giuseppe Parmiani, Giorgio Puzanov, Igor Romero, Pedro Schilling, Bastian Seliger, Barbara Stroncek, David Taube, Janis Tomei, Sara Zarour, Hassane M. Testori, Alessandro Wang, Ena Galon, Jérôme Ciliberto, Gennaro Mozzillo, Nicola Marincola, Francesco M. Thurin, Magdalena |
author_sort | Ascierto, Paolo A. |
collection | PubMed |
description | The fourth “Melanoma Bridge Meeting” took place in Naples, December 3–6th, 2014. The four topics discussed at this meeting were: Molecular and Immunological Advances, Combination Therapies, News in Immunotherapy, and Tumor Microenvironment and Biomarkers. Until recently systemic therapy for metastatic melanoma patients was ineffective, but recent advances in tumor biology and immunology have led to the development of new targeted and immunotherapeutic agents that prolong progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). New therapies, such as mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway inhibitors as well as other signaling pathway inhibitors, are being tested in patients with metastatic melanoma either as monotherapy or in combination, and all have yielded promising results. These include inhibitors of receptor tyrosine kinases (BRAF, MEK, and VEGFR), the phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase (PI3K) pathway [PI3K, AKT, mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)], activators of apoptotic pathway, and the cell cycle inhibitors (CDK4/6). Various locoregional interventions including radiotherapy and surgery are still valid approaches in treatment of advanced melanoma that can be integrated with novel therapies. Intrinsic, adaptive and acquired resistance occur with targeted therapy such as BRAF inhibitors, where most responses are short-lived. Given that the reactivation of the MAPK pathway through several distinct mechanisms is responsible for the majority of acquired resistance, it is logical to combine BRAF inhibitors with inhibitors of targets downstream in the MAPK pathway. For example, combination of BRAF/MEK inhibitors (e.g., dabrafenib/trametinib) have been demonstrated to improve survival compared to monotherapy. Application of novel technologies such sequencing have proven useful as a tool for identification of MAPK pathway-alternative resistance mechanism and designing other combinatorial therapies such as those between BRAF and AKT inhibitors. Improved survival rates have also been observed with immune-targeted therapy for patients with metastatic melanoma. Immune-modulating antibodies came to the forefront with anti-CTLA-4, programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) and PD-1 ligand 1 (PD-L1) pathway blocking antibodies that result in durable responses in a subset of melanoma patients. Agents targeting other immune inhibitory (e.g., Tim-3) or immune stimulating (e.g., CD137) receptors and other approaches such as adoptive cell transfer demonstrate clinical benefit in patients with melanoma as well. These agents are being studied in combination with targeted therapies in attempt to produce longer-term responses than those more typically seen with targeted therapy. Other combinations with cytotoxic chemotherapy and inhibitors of angiogenesis are changing the evolving landscape of therapeutic options and are being evaluated to prevent or delay resistance and to further improve survival rates for this patient population. This meeting’s specific focus was on advances in combination of targeted therapy and immunotherapy. Both combination targeted therapy approaches and different immunotherapies were discussed. Similarly to the previous meetings, the importance of biomarkers for clinical application as markers for diagnosis, prognosis and prediction of treatment response was an integral part of the meeting. The overall emphasis on biomarkers supports novel concepts toward integrating biomarkers into contemporary clinical management of patients with melanoma across the entire spectrum of disease stage. Translation of the knowledge gained from the biology of tumor microenvironment across different tumors represents a bridge to impact on prognosis and response to therapy in melanoma. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-4665874 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2015 |
publisher | BioMed Central |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-46658742015-12-02 Future perspectives in melanoma research: meeting report from the “Melanoma Bridge”: Napoli, December 3rd–6th 2014 Ascierto, Paolo A. Atkins, Michael Bifulco, Carlo Botti, Gerardo Cochran, Alistair Davies, Michael Demaria, Sandra Dummer, Reinhard Ferrone, Soldano Formenti, Silvia Gajewski, Thomas F. Garbe, Claus Khleif, Samir Kiessling, Rolf Lo, Roger Lorigan, Paul Arthur, Grant Mc Masucci, Giuseppe Melero, Ignacio Mihm, Martin Palmieri, Giuseppe Parmiani, Giorgio Puzanov, Igor Romero, Pedro Schilling, Bastian Seliger, Barbara Stroncek, David Taube, Janis Tomei, Sara Zarour, Hassane M. Testori, Alessandro Wang, Ena Galon, Jérôme Ciliberto, Gennaro Mozzillo, Nicola Marincola, Francesco M. Thurin, Magdalena J Transl Med Meeting Report The fourth “Melanoma Bridge Meeting” took place in Naples, December 3–6th, 2014. The four topics discussed at this meeting were: Molecular and Immunological Advances, Combination Therapies, News in Immunotherapy, and Tumor Microenvironment and Biomarkers. Until recently systemic therapy for metastatic melanoma patients was ineffective, but recent advances in tumor biology and immunology have led to the development of new targeted and immunotherapeutic agents that prolong progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). New therapies, such as mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway inhibitors as well as other signaling pathway inhibitors, are being tested in patients with metastatic melanoma either as monotherapy or in combination, and all have yielded promising results. These include inhibitors of receptor tyrosine kinases (BRAF, MEK, and VEGFR), the phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase (PI3K) pathway [PI3K, AKT, mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)], activators of apoptotic pathway, and the cell cycle inhibitors (CDK4/6). Various locoregional interventions including radiotherapy and surgery are still valid approaches in treatment of advanced melanoma that can be integrated with novel therapies. Intrinsic, adaptive and acquired resistance occur with targeted therapy such as BRAF inhibitors, where most responses are short-lived. Given that the reactivation of the MAPK pathway through several distinct mechanisms is responsible for the majority of acquired resistance, it is logical to combine BRAF inhibitors with inhibitors of targets downstream in the MAPK pathway. For example, combination of BRAF/MEK inhibitors (e.g., dabrafenib/trametinib) have been demonstrated to improve survival compared to monotherapy. Application of novel technologies such sequencing have proven useful as a tool for identification of MAPK pathway-alternative resistance mechanism and designing other combinatorial therapies such as those between BRAF and AKT inhibitors. Improved survival rates have also been observed with immune-targeted therapy for patients with metastatic melanoma. Immune-modulating antibodies came to the forefront with anti-CTLA-4, programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) and PD-1 ligand 1 (PD-L1) pathway blocking antibodies that result in durable responses in a subset of melanoma patients. Agents targeting other immune inhibitory (e.g., Tim-3) or immune stimulating (e.g., CD137) receptors and other approaches such as adoptive cell transfer demonstrate clinical benefit in patients with melanoma as well. These agents are being studied in combination with targeted therapies in attempt to produce longer-term responses than those more typically seen with targeted therapy. Other combinations with cytotoxic chemotherapy and inhibitors of angiogenesis are changing the evolving landscape of therapeutic options and are being evaluated to prevent or delay resistance and to further improve survival rates for this patient population. This meeting’s specific focus was on advances in combination of targeted therapy and immunotherapy. Both combination targeted therapy approaches and different immunotherapies were discussed. Similarly to the previous meetings, the importance of biomarkers for clinical application as markers for diagnosis, prognosis and prediction of treatment response was an integral part of the meeting. The overall emphasis on biomarkers supports novel concepts toward integrating biomarkers into contemporary clinical management of patients with melanoma across the entire spectrum of disease stage. Translation of the knowledge gained from the biology of tumor microenvironment across different tumors represents a bridge to impact on prognosis and response to therapy in melanoma. BioMed Central 2015-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4665874/ /pubmed/26619946 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12967-015-0736-1 Text en © Ascierto et al. 2015 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated. |
spellingShingle | Meeting Report Ascierto, Paolo A. Atkins, Michael Bifulco, Carlo Botti, Gerardo Cochran, Alistair Davies, Michael Demaria, Sandra Dummer, Reinhard Ferrone, Soldano Formenti, Silvia Gajewski, Thomas F. Garbe, Claus Khleif, Samir Kiessling, Rolf Lo, Roger Lorigan, Paul Arthur, Grant Mc Masucci, Giuseppe Melero, Ignacio Mihm, Martin Palmieri, Giuseppe Parmiani, Giorgio Puzanov, Igor Romero, Pedro Schilling, Bastian Seliger, Barbara Stroncek, David Taube, Janis Tomei, Sara Zarour, Hassane M. Testori, Alessandro Wang, Ena Galon, Jérôme Ciliberto, Gennaro Mozzillo, Nicola Marincola, Francesco M. Thurin, Magdalena Future perspectives in melanoma research: meeting report from the “Melanoma Bridge”: Napoli, December 3rd–6th 2014 |
title | Future perspectives in melanoma research: meeting report from the “Melanoma Bridge”: Napoli, December 3rd–6th 2014 |
title_full | Future perspectives in melanoma research: meeting report from the “Melanoma Bridge”: Napoli, December 3rd–6th 2014 |
title_fullStr | Future perspectives in melanoma research: meeting report from the “Melanoma Bridge”: Napoli, December 3rd–6th 2014 |
title_full_unstemmed | Future perspectives in melanoma research: meeting report from the “Melanoma Bridge”: Napoli, December 3rd–6th 2014 |
title_short | Future perspectives in melanoma research: meeting report from the “Melanoma Bridge”: Napoli, December 3rd–6th 2014 |
title_sort | future perspectives in melanoma research: meeting report from the “melanoma bridge”: napoli, december 3rd–6th 2014 |
topic | Meeting Report |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4665874/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26619946 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12967-015-0736-1 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT asciertopaoloa futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT atkinsmichael futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT bifulcocarlo futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT bottigerardo futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT cochranalistair futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT daviesmichael futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT demariasandra futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT dummerreinhard futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT ferronesoldano futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT formentisilvia futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT gajewskithomasf futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT garbeclaus futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT khleifsamir futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT kiesslingrolf futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT loroger futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT loriganpaul futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT arthurgrantmc futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT masuccigiuseppe futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT meleroignacio futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT mihmmartin futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT palmierigiuseppe futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT parmianigiorgio futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT puzanovigor futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT romeropedro futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT schillingbastian futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT seligerbarbara futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT stroncekdavid futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT taubejanis futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT tomeisara futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT zarourhassanem futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT testorialessandro futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT wangena futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT galonjerome futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT cilibertogennaro futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT mozzillonicola futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT marincolafrancescom futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 AT thurinmagdalena futureperspectivesinmelanomaresearchmeetingreportfromthemelanomabridgenapolidecember3rd6th2014 |