Résumé
Management of patients with metastatic melanoma has improved radically in recent years with the development of new drugs capable of significantly prolonging life expectancy. Two strategies have been implemented: targeted anti-BRAF therapy for BRAF-mutated melanomas, and non specific immunotherapies based on anti-CTLA-4 (ipilimumab) and, more recently, anti-PD-1 monoclonal antibodies. These antibodies, by blocking physiological brakes on immune activation, induce an indirect immune response. Ipilimumab, a drug approved in 2011 is of benefit to 20 % of patients but can also trigger significant immune-mediated toxicity. Anti-PD-1 antibodies presently in development seem to have a better therapeutic index, with higher response rates and less toxicity than ipilimumab. Combination therapy with anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1v is also giving encouraging preliminary results. In future, these new drugs will probably be used in combination, either concurrently or sequentially.
Titre traduit de la contribution | Drug therapy of melanoma: Anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 antibodies |
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langue originale | Français |
Pages (de - à) | 297-308 |
Nombre de pages | 12 |
journal | Bulletin de l'Academie Nationale de Medecine |
Volume | 198 |
Numéro de publication | 2 |
Les DOIs | |
état | Publié - 1 févr. 2014 |
mots-clés
- Antibodies
- Immunotherapy
- Melanoma
- Programmed cell death I receptor