Frontiers in Oncology (Oct 2023)

Differential gradients of immunotherapy vs targeted therapy efficacy according to the sun-exposure pattern of the site of occurrence of primary melanoma: a multicenter prospective cohort study (MelBase)

  • David Russo,
  • Stéphane Dalle,
  • Olivier Dereure,
  • Laurent Mortier,
  • Sophie Dalac-Rat,
  • Caroline Dutriaux,
  • Marie-Thérèse Leccia,
  • Marie-Thérèse Leccia,
  • Delphine Legoupil,
  • Henri Montaudié,
  • Eve Maubec,
  • Julie De Quatrebarbes,
  • Jean-Philippe Arnault,
  • Florence Granel Brocard,
  • Philippe Saïag,
  • Brigitte Dreno,
  • Clara Allayous,
  • Clara Allayous,
  • Bastien Oriano,
  • Wendy Lefevre,
  • Céleste Lebbé,
  • Céleste Lebbé,
  • Lise Boussemart,
  • Lise Boussemart

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1250026
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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BackgroundThe tumor mutational burden (TMB) is high in melanomas owing to UV-induced oncogenesis. While a high TMB is a predictive biomarker of response to PD-1 inhibitors, it may be associated with the rise of resistant clones to targeted therapy over time. We hypothesized that survivals may depend on both the sun-exposure profile of the site of primary melanoma and the type of systemic treatment.Patients and methodsPatients were screened from MelBase, a multicenter biobank dedicated to the prospective follow-up of stage III/IV melanoma. All patients with a known cutaneous primary melanoma who received a 1st-line systemic treatment by immunotherapy or targeted therapy were included (2013-2019). Outcomes were progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS).Results973 patients received either anti PD-1(n=466), anti CTLA-4(n=143), a combination of both (n=118), or targeted therapies (n=246). Patients’ characteristics at treatment initiation were: male (62%), median age of 62, AJCC stage IV (84%). Median follow-up was 15.5 months. The primary melanoma was located on chronically sun-exposed skin in 202 patients (G1: head neck), on intermittently sun-exposed skin in 699 patients (G2: trunk, arms, legs), and on sun-protected areas in 72 patients (G3: palms, soles). Median PFS was significantly higher in G1 under anti PD-1 treatment (8.7 months vs 3.3 and 3.4 months for G2 and G3, respectively) (p=0.011). PFS did not significantly differ in other groups. Similarly, median OS was significantly higher in G1 receiving 1st line anti PD-1 treatment (45.6 months vs 31.6 and 21.4 months for G2 and G3) (p=0.04), as opposed to 1st line targeted therapy (19.5 months vs 16.3 and 21.1 months for G1, G2 and G3 respectively).ConclusionOur study confirms that immunotherapy with anti PD-1 is particularly recommended for melanomas originating from chronically sun-exposed areas, but this finding needs to be confirmed by further research.

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