› Forums › General Melanoma Community › BRAF negative
- This topic has 9 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 10 years, 10 months ago by
Bubbles.
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- July 5, 2014 at 4:13 pm
Right now, as far as I know, it's …honestly not a bad thing to be BRAF negative. As you said, it limits treatment options a little, but those treatments wouldn't do a BRAF negative patient any good (and might cause some harm). I'm BRAF negative and my oncologist hasn't adjusted my recurrence chance or told me it was anything to worry about; it just meant I couldn't get into a clinical trial that required BRAF positive patients.
Really what they're saying when they say someone is "BRAF positive" is that the patient has a mutated BRAF gene, which is sending out signals saying "Grow, cells! Multiply! Be fruitful and also cancerous!" So the only real negative to being BRAF negative is that the new, much-spoken-of treatments aren't going to be able to help you. It's sort of like "I'm full right now, so I don't really need that pizza, as delicious as it sounds."
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- July 5, 2014 at 4:13 pm
Right now, as far as I know, it's …honestly not a bad thing to be BRAF negative. As you said, it limits treatment options a little, but those treatments wouldn't do a BRAF negative patient any good (and might cause some harm). I'm BRAF negative and my oncologist hasn't adjusted my recurrence chance or told me it was anything to worry about; it just meant I couldn't get into a clinical trial that required BRAF positive patients.
Really what they're saying when they say someone is "BRAF positive" is that the patient has a mutated BRAF gene, which is sending out signals saying "Grow, cells! Multiply! Be fruitful and also cancerous!" So the only real negative to being BRAF negative is that the new, much-spoken-of treatments aren't going to be able to help you. It's sort of like "I'm full right now, so I don't really need that pizza, as delicious as it sounds."
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- July 5, 2014 at 4:13 pm
Right now, as far as I know, it's …honestly not a bad thing to be BRAF negative. As you said, it limits treatment options a little, but those treatments wouldn't do a BRAF negative patient any good (and might cause some harm). I'm BRAF negative and my oncologist hasn't adjusted my recurrence chance or told me it was anything to worry about; it just meant I couldn't get into a clinical trial that required BRAF positive patients.
Really what they're saying when they say someone is "BRAF positive" is that the patient has a mutated BRAF gene, which is sending out signals saying "Grow, cells! Multiply! Be fruitful and also cancerous!" So the only real negative to being BRAF negative is that the new, much-spoken-of treatments aren't going to be able to help you. It's sort of like "I'm full right now, so I don't really need that pizza, as delicious as it sounds."
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- July 5, 2014 at 7:38 pm
Hi Anon,
Being BRAF positive or negative does not change your chance of recurrence. However, it does mean that the category of treatments that utilize BRAF inhibitors would not help you. Here is a post I created that explains what BRAF is and how it can contribute to about 50% of melanoma patients:
Hope that helps explain things a little. Yours, Celeste
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- July 5, 2014 at 7:38 pm
Hi Anon,
Being BRAF positive or negative does not change your chance of recurrence. However, it does mean that the category of treatments that utilize BRAF inhibitors would not help you. Here is a post I created that explains what BRAF is and how it can contribute to about 50% of melanoma patients:
Hope that helps explain things a little. Yours, Celeste
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- July 5, 2014 at 7:38 pm
Hi Anon,
Being BRAF positive or negative does not change your chance of recurrence. However, it does mean that the category of treatments that utilize BRAF inhibitors would not help you. Here is a post I created that explains what BRAF is and how it can contribute to about 50% of melanoma patients:
Hope that helps explain things a little. Yours, Celeste
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- July 5, 2014 at 7:46 pm
One other good thing…this study showed that patients responded EQUALLY well to these drug no matter if they were BRAF positive or not.
Survival, response duration, and activity by BRAF mutation status of nivolumab (anti-PD1, BMS-936588) and ipilimumab concurrent therapy in advanced melanoma
Abstract LBA9003Sznol, Kluger, Kirkwood, Wolchok, et al
53 melanoma patients were enrolled from 2009-2012 and were given ipi and nivo concurrently, then followed by nivo alone (with a variety of dosing patterns). Patients with and without BRAF had similar response.
WIshing you my best…c
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- July 5, 2014 at 7:46 pm
One other good thing…this study showed that patients responded EQUALLY well to these drug no matter if they were BRAF positive or not.
Survival, response duration, and activity by BRAF mutation status of nivolumab (anti-PD1, BMS-936588) and ipilimumab concurrent therapy in advanced melanoma
Abstract LBA9003Sznol, Kluger, Kirkwood, Wolchok, et al
53 melanoma patients were enrolled from 2009-2012 and were given ipi and nivo concurrently, then followed by nivo alone (with a variety of dosing patterns). Patients with and without BRAF had similar response.
WIshing you my best…c
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- July 5, 2014 at 7:46 pm
One other good thing…this study showed that patients responded EQUALLY well to these drug no matter if they were BRAF positive or not.
Survival, response duration, and activity by BRAF mutation status of nivolumab (anti-PD1, BMS-936588) and ipilimumab concurrent therapy in advanced melanoma
Abstract LBA9003Sznol, Kluger, Kirkwood, Wolchok, et al
53 melanoma patients were enrolled from 2009-2012 and were given ipi and nivo concurrently, then followed by nivo alone (with a variety of dosing patterns). Patients with and without BRAF had similar response.
WIshing you my best…c
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