Abstract

BackgroundUveal melanoma accounts for 85% of the ocular melanomas and has an increased risk of hematogenous spread, most commonly to the liver. After curative intent therapy like surgery and radiation, fifty percent of patients present with distant metastasis. Metastatic uveal melanoma (MUM) does not harbor typically targetable mutations, e.g., BRAF as in cutaneous melanoma. As a result, there is no proven therapy for MUM. Various chemotherapy and immunotherapy regimens have been tried and only partial response (PR) is the best that has been achieved in most of the cases. Here, we present a case of MUM treated with combination immune checkpoint therapy (ipilimumab and nivolumab) following the progression with single-agent nivolumab and demonstrating a durable response without recurrence more than 22 months from the last treatment.Case PresentationA 72-year-old Caucasian man presented with ciliary body melanoma of the left eye and underwent curative-intent enucleation but six months later developed diffuse hepatic metastases. He initially was treated with nivolumab 3 mg/kg every two weeks for four cycles but restaging scan showed a significant progression of the disease with increasing LDH. With the FDA approval for the combination of nivolumab 1mg/kg with Ipilimumab 3 mg/kg every three weeks for metastatic melanoma, this combination was given for four cycles with continuous rise in LDH to 993 unit/L (110-220 unit/L) until finishing cycle four of the treatment. Three weeks later, maintainence nivolumab 3mg/kg was initiated but two weeks later, he developed grade 4 liver toxicity with ALT 1565 unit/L (0-55 unit/L). A presumptive diagnosis of autoimmune hepatitis was made, nivolumab was stopped and oral prednisone 1mg/kg was started with quick resolution of elevated transaminases. Restaging abdominal MRI one month after the first and last dose of maintenance nivolumab showed PR and continuous shrinkage of the metastatic lesions with no hypermetabolic activity even on PET/CT. He is 22 months' post-treatment and continues to do well without any evidence of active disease.ConclusionAlthough, limited response has been shown to single agent immune checkpoint inhibitors and chemotherapy, our patient showed durable response with anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 combination therapy in MUM.

Highlights

  • Uveal melanoma accounts for 85% of the ocular melanomas and has an increased risk of hematogenous spread, most commonly to the liver

  • Conclusion: limited response has been shown to single agent immune checkpoint inhibitors and chemotherapy, our patient showed durable response with anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 combination therapy in Metastatic uveal melanoma (MUM)

  • We present a case of MUM treated with combination immune checkpoint therapy (Anti-PD-1 and Anti-CTLA-4) following the failure of single-agent nivolumab and demonstrate a durable response months after receiving treatment with nivolumab and ipilimumab combination

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Summary

Background

Uveal melanoma arises from the melanocytes in the iris, ciliary body, or choroid [1]. Due to the marginal benefits from selumetinib compared to chemotherapy and the approval of immune checkpoint inhibitors in 2011, several case reports and series have investigated ipilimumab for treatment of MUM These studies highlight the low ORR (≤ 5% for MUM in contrast to ~ 20% for cutaneous melanoma) [8]. This trial, is not recruiting patients yet To this point, we present a case of MUM treated with combination immune checkpoint therapy (Anti-PD-1 and Anti-CTLA-4) following the failure of single-agent nivolumab and demonstrate a durable response months after receiving treatment with nivolumab and ipilimumab combination. He was treated with nivolumab 3 mg/kg every two weeks and completed four cycles prior to obtaining a restaging MRI This showed the progression of disease in the liver with the largest right lobe lesion measuring 5.5 cm [Fig. 1c]. Most recent AST/ALT values were 15/14 units/L respectively

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