Molecular and Clinicopathological Biomarkers in the Neoadjuvant Treatment of Patients with Advanced Resectable Melanoma.
Piotr J BłońskiAnna Małgorzata CzarneckaKrzysztof OstaszewskiAnna Szumera-CiećkiewiczPiotr Lukasz RutkowskiPublished in: Biomedicines (2024)
Neoadjuvant systemic therapy is emerging as the best medical practice in patients with resectable stage III melanoma. As different regimens are expected to become available in this approach, the improved optimization of treatment strategies is required. Personalization of care in each individual patient-by precisely determining the disease-related risk and the most efficient therapeutic approach-is expected to minimize disease recurrence, but also the incidence of treatment-related adverse events and the extent of surgical intervention. This can be achieved through validation and clinical application of predictive and prognostic biomarkers. For immune checkpoint inhibitors, there are no validated predictive biomarkers until now. Promising predictive molecular biomarkers for neoadjuvant immunotherapy are tumor mutational burden and the interferon-gamma pathway expression signature. Pathological response to neoadjuvant treatment is a biomarker of a favorable prognosis and surrogate endpoint for recurrence-free survival in clinical trials. Despite the reliability of these biomarkers, risk stratification and response prediction in the neoadjuvant setting are still unsatisfactory and represent a critical knowledge gap, limiting the development of optimized personalized strategies in everyday practice.
Keyphrases
- locally advanced
- rectal cancer
- healthcare
- free survival
- lymph node
- clinical trial
- randomized controlled trial
- primary care
- squamous cell carcinoma
- radiation therapy
- quality improvement
- stem cells
- dendritic cells
- combination therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- study protocol
- drug induced
- binding protein
- phase ii
- smoking cessation