Local and Recurrent Regional Metastases of Melanoma

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Abstract

Up to 10% of patients with cutaneous melanoma will develop recurrent locoregional disease. While surgical resection remains the mainstay of treatment for isolated recurrences, locoregional melanoma can often present as bulky, unresectable disease and can pose a significant therapeutic challenge. This chapter focuses on the natural history of local and regionally recurrent metastases and the multiple treatment modalities which exist for advanced locoregional melanoma, including regional perfusion procedures such as hyperthermic isolated limb perfusion and isolated limb infusion, intralesional therapies, and neo-adjuvant systemic therapy strategies for borderline resectable regional disease. Hyperthermic limb perfusion (HILP) and isolated limb infusion (ILI) are generally well-tolerated and have shown overall response rates between 44% and 90%. Intralesional therapies also appear to be well-tolerated as adverse events are usually limited to the site of injection and minor transient flu-like symptoms. Systemic targeted therapies have shown to have response rates up to 85% when used as neoadjuvant therapy in patients with borderline resectable disease. While combination immunotherapy in the neoadjuvant setting has also shown promising results, this data has not yet matured

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APA

Perez, M. C., Tanabe, K. K., Ariyan, C. E., Miura, J. T., Mutabdzic, D., Farma, J. M., & Zager, J. S. (2020). Local and Recurrent Regional Metastases of Melanoma. In Cutaneous Melanoma, Sixth Edition (Vol. 1, pp. 705–737). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05070-2_24

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