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Pilot study of preoperative chemotherapy with cisplatin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine in patients with local-regional recurrence of melanoma

✍ Scribed by Antonio C. Buzaid; Sewa S. Legha; Charles M. Balch; Merrick Ross; Sigrid Ring; Carl Plager; Nicholas E. Papadopoulos; Adel K. El-Naggar; Robert S. Benjamin


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
605 KB
Volume
74
Category
Article
ISSN
0008-543X

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✦ Synopsis


Background:

Because the prognosis of patients with local-regional recurrence of melanoma treated with surgery alone usually is poor, the authors conducted a study designed to determine the efficacy of preoperative chemotherapy using cisplatin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (cvd) in this patient population.

Methods:

Eligibility included biopsy-proven, measurable, and potentially resectable local-regional disease in the form of lymph node metastases, satellite/in-transit metastases and/or local recurrence. cvd consisted of cisplatin, 20 mg/m2 intravenously (iv) on days 2-5; vinblastine, 1.6 mg/m2 iv on days 1-5; and dacarbazine, 800 mg/m2 iv on day 1 only, repeated every 3 weeks. patients usually received two to three courses of cvd and then underwent surgery. postoperatively, patients who responded continued cvd for a maximum of 8 courses; nonresponders received no further therapy.

Results:

Of 52 consecutive patients (40 with lymph node involvement and 12 with skin metastases), 5 (10%) achieved a pathologic complete response and 20 (38%) achieved a partial response, for an overall response rate of 48% (95% confidence interval, 34-62). of the five patients who achieved a pathologic complete response, three had attained a clinical complete response and one a partial response, and one had stable disease after initial chemotherapy. at a median follow-up of 54 months (range, 32-69 months), 38% of the patients remained disease free.

Conclusion:

Preoperative chemotherapy with cvd has significant activity in local-regional recurrences of melanoma, resulting in pathologic complete response in 10% of the patients. because its impact on survival remains unclear, this treatment strategy should currently remain investigational. preoperative chemotherapy, however, could be offered to certain patients with bulky, borderline resectable, regional disease for whom cytoreduction may make surgery easier or less mutilating.


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