The role of effective systemic therapies in earlier stages (I-III) melanoma, both in adjuvant and neoadjuvant settings is rapidly changing the role of surgery in the management cutaneous melanoma, particularly regarding surgical safety margins for wide local excision (WLE), the role of sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) and the extent of lymph node dissections. The randomized phase 2 SWOG1801 trial has demonstrated superiority of neoadjuvant-adjuvant anti-PD1 therapy in improving event-free survival by 23% at 2-years over adjuvant anti-PD-1 therapy only. Furthermore, the PRADO trial has suggested a more tailored approach both the extent of surgery as well as adjuvant therapy can safely and effectively be done, depending on the response to initial neoadjuvant immunotherapy. These results await validation and it is expected that in 2024 the phase 3 Nadina trial (NCT04949113) will definitively establish neo-adjuvant combination immunotherapy as the novel standard. This will further redefine the management of localized melanoma. The use of effective systemic therapies will continue to evolve in the next decade and, together with new emerging diagnostic and surveillance techniques, will likely reduce the extent of routine surgery for stage I-III melanoma.
Keyphrases
- lymph node
- sentinel lymph node
- early stage
- phase iii
- minimally invasive
- rectal cancer
- coronary artery bypass
- phase ii
- skin cancer
- locally advanced
- study protocol
- clinical trial
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- free survival
- open label
- surgical site infection
- public health
- randomized controlled trial
- basal cell carcinoma
- radiation therapy
- stem cells
- placebo controlled
- mesenchymal stem cells
- acute coronary syndrome
- coronary artery disease
- drug induced