American journal of ophthalmology | 2019

Efficacy of Vismodegib for the Treatment of Orbital and Advanced Periocular Basal Cell Carcinoma.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


PURPOSE\nTo evaluate the effectiveness of vismodegib, a Hedgehog pathway inhibitor, in treating orbital and advanced periocular basal cell carcinoma (BCC) in Israeli multidisciplinary medical centers.\n\n\nDESIGN\nRetrospective case series.\n\n\nMETHODS\nBackground, treatment, and outcome data were retrospectively collected from the medical records of all patients with locally advanced and metastatic orbital or periocular BCC treated with vismodegib in 2012-2017 at two tertiary medical centers.\n\n\nRESULTS\nThe cohort included 21 patients (16 male) of median age 76 years with periocular (n=6) or orbital (n=15) BCC. Median duration of treatment was 9 months, with follow-up of 26 months (range 9-60 months) overall and 17 months after treatment cessation. Clinical response was complete in 10 patients, partial in 10 patients and stable in one patient. Among the complete responders, 5 (24%) maintained a complete response at 16 months, and 3 who stopped treatment (37%), had a recurrence 8 months later. Almost all treatment-related adverse reactions were graded 1-2 (low-grade). The most common grade 1-2 complications were muscle spasm (76%), followed by dysgeusia (57%), alopecia (47%), weight loss (47%) and decreased appetite (19%). The only grade 3-4 adverse event was hepatotoxicity (10%). Eight patients discontinued treatment due to side effects. Five patients died, most from reasons unrelated to vismodegib therapy, accept for one patient who died from possibly treatment-related sepsis (grade 5 adverse event).\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nTo our knowledge, this is the only study generated outside the USA and Europe, and it represents the largest study to date on vismodegib therapy for locally advanced periocular BCC. Treatment according to an individualized maximally tolerated dose may achieve a comparable response to the ERIVANCE protocol. Longer-term studies are needed to assess prognosis.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.ajo.2019.04.013
Language English
Journal American journal of ophthalmology

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