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Future options

Forums General Melanoma Community Future options

  • Post
    pigs_sty
    Participant

      Hi,

      I'm just looking for future options for my wife. Stage 4, BRAF +ve, failed Vem and has now started on Ipi (2nd infusion) so fortunately we have PD1 and possibly TIL to try if Ipi fails. I'm just looking for things I can reasearch in to for the future. So far I have read about:

      Anti LAG3

      Anti GITR

      Anti KIR

      Can anyone help with other possible treatments to reasearch? Many thanks

       

    Viewing 8 reply threads
    • Replies
        JerryfromFauq
        Participant

          HD IL-2 (Interleukin 2) 15-18% chance of helping, 5% chance of an actual cure.  Tough treatment for a week at a time. 80-90% recovery 5 days after the 5 day in hospital treatment.   6 weeks from start to know if having a positive response.  The reason I'm still alive after being told my wife would be a widow in 30-180 days (In March 2007)!  Must be done by a very experienced IL-2 Oncologist with a specially trained staff.  I talked to many people spouses that said their spouse had been going to try the IL-2 as a last resort, BUT their mate did not recover from chemo treatments in time to get in shape to take the rigorous IL-2 treatments.  I had 6 weeks of the treatment over two years.

          JerryfromFauq
          Participant

            HD IL-2 (Interleukin 2) 15-18% chance of helping, 5% chance of an actual cure.  Tough treatment for a week at a time. 80-90% recovery 5 days after the 5 day in hospital treatment.   6 weeks from start to know if having a positive response.  The reason I'm still alive after being told my wife would be a widow in 30-180 days (In March 2007)!  Must be done by a very experienced IL-2 Oncologist with a specially trained staff.  I talked to many people spouses that said their spouse had been going to try the IL-2 as a last resort, BUT their mate did not recover from chemo treatments in time to get in shape to take the rigorous IL-2 treatments.  I had 6 weeks of the treatment over two years.

            JerryfromFauq
            Participant

              HD IL-2 (Interleukin 2) 15-18% chance of helping, 5% chance of an actual cure.  Tough treatment for a week at a time. 80-90% recovery 5 days after the 5 day in hospital treatment.   6 weeks from start to know if having a positive response.  The reason I'm still alive after being told my wife would be a widow in 30-180 days (In March 2007)!  Must be done by a very experienced IL-2 Oncologist with a specially trained staff.  I talked to many people spouses that said their spouse had been going to try the IL-2 as a last resort, BUT their mate did not recover from chemo treatments in time to get in shape to take the rigorous IL-2 treatments.  I had 6 weeks of the treatment over two years.

              kylez
              Participant

                I'm BRAF wild-type so this list does not have any drugs requiring the BRAF mutation. Many of these are early phase I trials. I think all of these are on clinicaltrials.gov. Besides anti-PDL1 I have no idea which ones are most promising. I almost ended up on the MEDI4736 + MEK trial. One persion told me h had very positive results within a week from AKT + MEK combo.

                PD-L1 drugs: MEDI4736 (combined with MEK162 or Mekinist), PDL3280A

                non-PD1 Immune therapies: CD40, CDX-1127, APN401, AM0010 (IL-10), T-VEC, GR-MD-02 Galactin Inhibitor + IPI combo. No open trial currently: Anti-OX40.
                 
                Targeted therapies: AKT + MEK, LEE011 + MEK162, MEK + Palbociclib, AMG232 + MEK, WP1066, BVD-523 (ERK inhibitor).
                 
                PAN-RAF inhibitors: ARQ 736, LY3009120, MLN2480.
                 
                 
                kylez
                Participant

                  I'm BRAF wild-type so this list does not have any drugs requiring the BRAF mutation. Many of these are early phase I trials. I think all of these are on clinicaltrials.gov. Besides anti-PDL1 I have no idea which ones are most promising. I almost ended up on the MEDI4736 + MEK trial. One persion told me h had very positive results within a week from AKT + MEK combo.

                  PD-L1 drugs: MEDI4736 (combined with MEK162 or Mekinist), PDL3280A

                  non-PD1 Immune therapies: CD40, CDX-1127, APN401, AM0010 (IL-10), T-VEC, GR-MD-02 Galactin Inhibitor + IPI combo. No open trial currently: Anti-OX40.
                   
                  Targeted therapies: AKT + MEK, LEE011 + MEK162, MEK + Palbociclib, AMG232 + MEK, WP1066, BVD-523 (ERK inhibitor).
                   
                  PAN-RAF inhibitors: ARQ 736, LY3009120, MLN2480.
                   
                   
                    kylez
                    Participant

                      Correction: MPDL3280A, not PDL3280A.

                      kylez
                      Participant

                        Correction: MPDL3280A, not PDL3280A.

                        kylez
                        Participant

                          Correction: MPDL3280A, not PDL3280A.

                        kylez
                        Participant

                          I'm BRAF wild-type so this list does not have any drugs requiring the BRAF mutation. Many of these are early phase I trials. I think all of these are on clinicaltrials.gov. Besides anti-PDL1 I have no idea which ones are most promising. I almost ended up on the MEDI4736 + MEK trial. One persion told me h had very positive results within a week from AKT + MEK combo.

                          PD-L1 drugs: MEDI4736 (combined with MEK162 or Mekinist), PDL3280A

                          non-PD1 Immune therapies: CD40, CDX-1127, APN401, AM0010 (IL-10), T-VEC, GR-MD-02 Galactin Inhibitor + IPI combo. No open trial currently: Anti-OX40.
                           
                          Targeted therapies: AKT + MEK, LEE011 + MEK162, MEK + Palbociclib, AMG232 + MEK, WP1066, BVD-523 (ERK inhibitor).
                           
                          PAN-RAF inhibitors: ARQ 736, LY3009120, MLN2480.
                           
                           
                          RJoeyB
                          Participant

                            There is an "IDO inhibitor", INCB24360, from Incyte that I've seen a number of trials for and for several different cancers.  With melanoma, it appears that all the trials are in combination with the various checkpoint inhibitors, including anti-CTLA-4 (ipi), anti-PD-1 (nivo and pembro), and anti-PD-L1 (MEDI4736).  I don't know how previous failure on any of those as a single agent affects eligibility for participation in the individual trials, it may vary, but the early trials seem to show improved responses over the single agents.

                            Just before I did Yervoy in spring 2013, my medical oncologist offered it as an option post brain met and craniotomy and I was preparing to enroll in a trial combining Yervoy with it, but was eventually ruled ineligible because of my prior TIL cell therapy — the eligibility criteria were a bit vague when it came to TIL, but ultimately they decided it disqualified me.  It wasn't a huge issue for me, I viewed it as a "bonus" if I could get it, but Yervoy was the main focus.

                            Rather than list the various trial links and press releases, if you simply Google "INCB24360 melanoma", you should find what you need to know.  Hope that helps.

                            Best, Joe

                            RJoeyB
                            Participant

                              There is an "IDO inhibitor", INCB24360, from Incyte that I've seen a number of trials for and for several different cancers.  With melanoma, it appears that all the trials are in combination with the various checkpoint inhibitors, including anti-CTLA-4 (ipi), anti-PD-1 (nivo and pembro), and anti-PD-L1 (MEDI4736).  I don't know how previous failure on any of those as a single agent affects eligibility for participation in the individual trials, it may vary, but the early trials seem to show improved responses over the single agents.

                              Just before I did Yervoy in spring 2013, my medical oncologist offered it as an option post brain met and craniotomy and I was preparing to enroll in a trial combining Yervoy with it, but was eventually ruled ineligible because of my prior TIL cell therapy — the eligibility criteria were a bit vague when it came to TIL, but ultimately they decided it disqualified me.  It wasn't a huge issue for me, I viewed it as a "bonus" if I could get it, but Yervoy was the main focus.

                              Rather than list the various trial links and press releases, if you simply Google "INCB24360 melanoma", you should find what you need to know.  Hope that helps.

                              Best, Joe

                              RJoeyB
                              Participant

                                There is an "IDO inhibitor", INCB24360, from Incyte that I've seen a number of trials for and for several different cancers.  With melanoma, it appears that all the trials are in combination with the various checkpoint inhibitors, including anti-CTLA-4 (ipi), anti-PD-1 (nivo and pembro), and anti-PD-L1 (MEDI4736).  I don't know how previous failure on any of those as a single agent affects eligibility for participation in the individual trials, it may vary, but the early trials seem to show improved responses over the single agents.

                                Just before I did Yervoy in spring 2013, my medical oncologist offered it as an option post brain met and craniotomy and I was preparing to enroll in a trial combining Yervoy with it, but was eventually ruled ineligible because of my prior TIL cell therapy — the eligibility criteria were a bit vague when it came to TIL, but ultimately they decided it disqualified me.  It wasn't a huge issue for me, I viewed it as a "bonus" if I could get it, but Yervoy was the main focus.

                                Rather than list the various trial links and press releases, if you simply Google "INCB24360 melanoma", you should find what you need to know.  Hope that helps.

                                Best, Joe

                                  pigs_sty
                                  Participant
                                    Thank you all for this information!
                                    pigs_sty
                                    Participant
                                      Thank you all for this information!
                                      pigs_sty
                                      Participant
                                        Thank you all for this information!
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