
New Drug Therapy Combination Shows Promise For Advanced Melanoma Patients
Key Takeaways
- The combination therapy targets FAK and RAF/MEK pathways, addressing melanoma brain metastasis effectively in preclinical models.
- Oral drugs defactinib and avutometinib offer accessible treatment options, especially for patients in rural areas.
A federally funded research team is testing a new combination drug therapy that could both treat and prevent melanoma metastasis to the brain.
A federally funded research team led by
“Once melanoma has spread to the brain, it’s very hard to treat.
Holmen and her team first examined what causes melanoma cells to spread to the brain and identified focal adhesion kinase (FAK) as a potential target for new therapies. FAK is an enzyme that regulates cell growth, and, they found, is a major contributor to melanoma metastasis.
If caught early, melanoma can be treatable with surgical removal. But once the disease has spread beyond the skin to other organs, it becomes more difficult to treat—and more fatal.
“Patients can become resistant to those drugs over time. And once the disease has reached the brain, they also don’t work as well,” says Holmen. “The window of time to treat a patient with brain metastasis is shortened quite significantly because the average survival from time of diagnosis of brain metastasis is only about a year—even while using these other therapies.”
Holmen and her research team found that inhibiting the enzyme FAK in combination with an inhibitor of RAF and MEK—which targets another cellular pathway that regulates cancer cell growth—was effective in prolonging survival rates in preclinical mouse models. They specifically studied a subtype of melanoma triggered by a mutation of
“This combination drug therapy also stopped the development of brain metastasis, and that’s where this research is very exciting,” says Holmen. “Not only did it treat the tumor once it spread to and was growing in the brain, it also prevented the cells from getting there in the first place.”
This combination drug therapy was evaluated through support by the National Cancer Institute and in partnership with
The oral treatment combines two drugs: defactinib, which blocks a protein called FAK, and avutometinib, which blocks proteins called RAF and MEK. This combination therapy aims to make treatment more accessible for melanoma patients who have difficulty traveling long distances. Melanoma rates are consistently high in states across the Mountain West, the states
“Receiving a treatment like immunotherapy requires an infusion, and patients have to travel to a hospital or clinic for that kind of specialized treatment,” says Holmen. “Having oral drugs available will increase treatment options for our patients, especially those living in rural and frontier areas.”
The study, led by
The research described in this release is supported by the National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute including P30 CA042014, R01CA121118, and Huntsman Cancer Foundation.



































