Research Papers:
Impact of Covid-19 on the management of patients with metastatic melanoma
PDF | Full Text | How to cite | Press Release
Metrics: PDF 672 views | Full Text 2876 views | ?
Abstract
Michèle Welti1,2, Phil F. Cheng1,2, Joanna Mangana1,2, Mitchell P. Levesque1,2, Reinhard Dummer1,2 and Laurence Imhof1,2,3
1 Department of Dermatology, University Hospital Zurich (USZ), Zurich 8091, Switzerland
2 Faculty of Medicine, University of Zurich (UZH), Zurich 8032, Switzerland
3 Institute for Biomedical Engineering, ETH Zurich, Zurich 8092, Switzerland
Correspondence to:
Michèle Welti, | email: | [email protected] |
Keywords: metastatic melanoma; Covid-19; Sars-CoV-2; immunotherapy; targeted therapy
Received: September 30, 2022 Accepted: December 07, 2022 Published: December 29, 2022
ABSTRACT
The Covid-19 pandemic created new uncertainties in the management of metastatic melanoma patients. In particular, the impact of immunotherapy, targeted therapy, or chemotherapy on the risk of Sars-CoV-2 infection and severity was debated. In this study, we analyzed all patients with metastatic melanoma receiving therapy who developed Covid-19 between February 2020 and February 2022. We retrospectively collected demographic data, cancer-specific parameters, melanoma treatment regimen, comorbidities and Covid-19-specific parameters in these patients. Of the 350 patients with metastatic melanoma, 25 had Covid-19. The median age at the time of Covid-19 diagnosis was 66 years (range 36–86), 10 patients were female, and 15 patients were male. The treatment regimen during infection was immunotherapy in 12 cases, followed by targeted therapy (n = 8), chemotherapy (n = 2), and TVEC injections, follow-up and palliative therapy in 1 case each. The severity was mild in 17 patients and 8 had a moderate to critical course. Patients with a severe Covid-19 course were often older and had more comorbidities than patients with a mild infection. Many of the patients had a mild Covid-19 course despite having metastatic melanoma and systemic therapy. We therefore recommend continuing systemic therapy whenever possible, even in such exceptional situations as the Covid-19 pandemic.
All site content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
PII: 28333