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Cutting-edge therapies give melanoma patients more options
Jan 02, 2018

Cutting-edge therapies give melanoma patients more options

The National Cancer Institute estimates that more than 87,000 new cases of melanoma were diagnosed in 2017. While not as common as other forms of skin cancer, melanoma is more aggressive, and if it’s not diagnosed and treated early, it can spread rapidly to other organs. Within the last 10 years, however, researchers have developed new treatments that are giving patients hope.

“Melanoma is a cancer of the melanocyte, and the melanocyte is a cell in the body that produces melanin or the pigment that changes when it tans,” says Dr. Keith Wells, a medical oncologist at Willamette Valley Cancer Institute’s clinic in Corvallis.

While skin cancer is typically associated with changes on the skin, approximately 15 percent of patients diagnosed with melanoma show no visible skin changes. Dr. Wells says the cancer is often spotted after it spreads to the lymph nodes and patients notice a bump in their neck or groin area. When melanoma spreads to other parts of the body, often the lung, liver or brain, it’s referred to as metastatic melanoma, or stage IV melanoma.

“Melanoma was one of the cancers that was a death sentence 10-15 years ago. Since 2011, there’s been a lot of different treatments for melanoma,” says Dr. Wells.

Two newer avenues of treatment include:

  • Targeted therapy, which helps stop cancer from growing and spreading. It works by targeting specific genes or proteins found in cancer cells or in cells related to cancer growth, like blood vessel cells. Doctors often use targeted therapy with chemotherapy and other treatments.
  • Immunotherapy, a type of cancer treatment that boosts the body’s natural defenses to fight the cancer. It uses substances made by the body or in a laboratory to improve or restore immune system function, which enables the immune system to identify cancer cells and kill them.

Dr. Wells says these treatments do not work for everyone, but roughly 50-60 percent of patients experience a long-term benefit.

“Historically, when patients were diagnosed with metastatic melanoma, they had weeks to months to live. And now, with these therapies, we’re seeing patients live many years. It’s wonderful.”

Some of the drugs originally approved by the FDA to treat melanoma are now also being used to treat other types of cancers, including lung and liver cancer and some types of blood cancers.