Melanoma brain metastasis presentation, treatment, and outcomes in the age of targeted and immunotherapies.
Evan D BanderMelissa YuanJoseph A CarnevaleAnne S ReinerKatherine S PanageasMichael A PostowViviane TabarNelson S MossPublished in: Cancer (2021)
Historically, melanoma brain metastases (MBM) have carried a poor survival prognosis of 4 to 6 months; however, the introduction of immunotherapy and targeted precision medicines has altered the survival curve for advanced melanoma. In this large, single-institution, contemporary cohort, the authors demonstrate a significant increase in survival of patients with MBM to 13 months within the last 5 years of the study. A worse prognosis for patients with MBM was significantly associated with the number of metastases at diagnosis, previous exposure to immunotherapy, spread of disease to the leptomeningeal compartment, serum lactate dehydrogenase elevation, and the presence of extracranial disease. The current age of systemic treatments has also been accompanied by shifts in the use of central nervous system-directed therapies.