Cancers (Sep 2020)

Treatment of Metastatic Uveal Melanoma: Systematic Review

  • Cristina Rodriguez-Vidal,
  • Daniel Fernandez-Diaz,
  • Beatriz Fernandez-Marta,
  • Nerea Lago-Baameiro,
  • María Pardo,
  • Paula Silva,
  • Laura Paniagua,
  • María José Blanco-Teijeiro,
  • Antonio Piñeiro,
  • Manuel Bande

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12092557
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. 2557

Abstract

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Introduction: More than 50% of patients with uveal melanoma end up developing metastases. Currently, there is no standard first-line treatment that facilitates proper management of the metastatic disease. Methods: A systematic review of the last 40 years in PubMed with an exhaustive and strict selection of studies was conducted, in which the unit of measurement was overall survival (OS) expressed in Kaplan–Meier curves or numerically. Results: After the selection process, 110 articles were included. Regional therapies, such as intra-arterial liver chemotherapy (OS: 2, 9–22 months), isolated liver perfusion (OS: 9, 6–27, 4 months), or selective internal radiation therapy (OS: 18 months in monotherapy and 26 months in combination with other therapies) showed some superiority when compared to systemic therapies, such as chemotherapy (OS: 4, 6–17 months), immunotherapy (OS: 5–19, 1 month), immunosuppression (OS: 11 months), or targeted therapy (OS: 6–12 months), without being significant. Conclusions: The results of this review suggest that there are no important differences in OS when comparing the different current treatment modalities. Most of the differences found seem to be explained by the heterogenicity of the different studies and the presence of biases in their design, rather than actual extensions of patient survival.

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