Serum 5-S-cysteinyldopa behavior in the early phase of nivolumab treatment of 12 melanoma patients.
Toshikazu OmodakaAkane MinagawaHisashi UharaKazumasa WakamatsuTomonobu KoizumiYoshiharu YokokawaHiroshi KogaRyuhei OkuyamaPublished in: The Journal of dermatology (2018)
Along with the expansion of therapeutic options for metastatic melanoma, the development of useful biomarkers is urgently required to predict and monitor treatment response. Serum 5-S-cysteinyldopa (5-S-CD) has been identified as a diagnostic marker of malignant melanoma, but its utility as a biomarker for emerging therapeutic agents remains unknown. We assessed serum 5-S-CD in 12 metastatic melanoma patients (median age, 76 years; six men and six women) who had been treated with nivolumab (Nivo) at Shinshu University Hospital between 2014 and 2016. Serum 5-S-CD and lactate dehydrogenase levels before and at 3-6 weeks of Nivo treatment were obtained and their changes were compared with clinical responses as defined by the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors criteria (version 1.1). A decrease of 10 nmol/L or more of serum 5-S-CD was observed only in partial response patients (2/3 cases, 67%), while an increase of 10 nmol/L or more of serum 5-S-CD was witnessed only in progressive disease patients (4/8 cases, 50%). Serum 5-S-CD changes were within ±10 nmol/L in the remaining six patients (partial response, one; stable disease, one; progressive disease, four). The results of the four moderately affected progressive disease patients were suspected to have been influenced by small-sized metastatic lesions, a mixed response that included diminished and enlarged metastatic lesions, prior therapy to Nivo with BRAF inhibitors or radiation, or the development of brain metastasis. Serum 5-S-CD in the early phase of Nivo treatment may be helpful to predict therapeutic response in metastatic melanoma.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- small cell lung cancer
- multiple sclerosis
- squamous cell carcinoma
- prognostic factors
- adipose tissue
- white matter
- radiation therapy
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- mesenchymal stem cells
- insulin resistance
- nk cells
- middle aged
- wild type
- replacement therapy