Author: DermNet Editor in Chief Adjunct A/Prof Amanda Oakley, Dermatologist, Hamilton, New Zealand. January 2018.
This article was supported by an educational grant from Roche New Zealand, distributors of Cotellicâ„¢ (cobimetinib) in New Zealand. Sponsorship does not influence content.
Targeted cancer therapies are drugs used to treat certain malignanttumours by blocking the action of particular molecular targets such as genes and proteins. They are classified as small molecules or monoclonalantibodies.
They are also called precision medicines.
How do targeted cancer therapies work?
Targeted cancer therapies interact with a target molecule to prevent tumour cells proliferating.
The target molecule may be present in several different types of tumour.
The molecule may be specific to a tumour (due to mutation) or may be more abundant in a tumour than in normal cells.
This reduces the damage done to surrounding normal cells.
Some drugs target fusion proteins, due to chromosomalabnormalities in the tumour.
Targeted therapies are currently used in dermatology for patients with advanced cancers. They are also used in clinical trials as adjuvant therapy (supplementary treatment given to people who are in remission from their cancer but are at high risk of relapse in the future).
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What targeted therapies are available?
Several targeted therapies are marketed in dermatology to treat advanced skin cancers, and others are in development.
Vismodegib and sonidegib are available treatments for advanced basal cell carcinoma. They target Smoothened, a protein involved in the abnormal Hedgehog signalling pathway.
Products targeting mutations in the NOTCH gene and TP53 mutations
Immune checkpoint inhibitors (drugs that target cancer cells for elimination by the immune system). The first of these, cemiplimab, was registered by the FDA in 2018.
Targeted therapies have many side effects, including adverse cutaneousreactions. In some cases, side effects are associated with excellent tumour response.
The efficacy of targeted therapies is variable. They may lose their efficacy over time, having been initially successful at reducing tumour growth and in some cases leading to complete remission.