Sex-Based Differences in Treatment with Immune Checkpoint Inhibition and Targeted Therapy for Advanced Melanoma: A Nationwide Cohort Study

Recent meta-analyses show conflicting data on sex-dependent benefit following systemic treatment for advanced melanoma patients. We examined the nationwide Dutch Melanoma Treatment Registry (July 2013–July 2018), assessing sex-dependent differences in advanced melanoma patients (stage IIIC/IV) with...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancers 2021-09, Vol.13 (18), p.4639
Hauptverfasser: van der Kooij, Monique, Dekkers, Olaf, Aarts, Maureen, van den Berkmortel, Franchette, Boers-Sonderen, Marye, de Groot, Jan, Hospers, Geke, Piersma, Djura, van Rijn, Rozemarijn, Suijkerbuijk, Karijn, Westgeest, Hans, van der Veldt, Astrid, Vreugdenhil, Gerard, Wilgenhof, Sofie, Wouters, Michel, Haanen, John, van den Eertwegh, Alfonsus, Kapiteijn, Ellen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recent meta-analyses show conflicting data on sex-dependent benefit following systemic treatment for advanced melanoma patients. We examined the nationwide Dutch Melanoma Treatment Registry (July 2013–July 2018), assessing sex-dependent differences in advanced melanoma patients (stage IIIC/IV) with respect to clinical characteristics, mutational profiles, treatments initiated, grade 3–4 adverse events (AEs), treatment responses, and mortality. We included 3985 patients, 2363 men (59%) and showed that although men and women with advanced melanoma differ in clinical and tumor characteristics, the safety profile of immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) is comparable. The data suggest a 10% survival advantage for women, mainly seen in patients ≥60 years of age and patients with BRAF V600 mutant melanoma. Following ICI there was no survival difference.
ISSN:2072-6694
2072-6694
DOI:10.3390/cancers13184639