PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Immunotherapy before surgery helps shrink tumors in patients with desmoplastic melanoma

New approach spares patients from more disfiguring surgeries or additional treatments

2026-01-29
(Press-News.org) New results from a clinical trial co-led by UCLA investigators demonstrate how treating desmoplastic melanoma, a rare and aggressive skin cancer, with immunotherapy before surgery can dramatically shrink or even eliminate tumors, sparing patients from more aggressive surgeries and preserving their quality of life. 

The findings, published in Nature Cancer, show that 71% of patients who received the immunotherapy drug pembrolizumab, an anti-PD-1 immune checkpoint inhibitor that stimulates the body’s immune system to fight cancer, before surgery had no detectable cancer remaining at the time of surgery.  

The multicenter clinical trial, known as SWOG S1512, was conducted by the SWOG Cancer Research Network and funded by the National Cancer Institute. It marks the first study to test neoadjuvant PD-1 blockade in this population and suggests a promising new treatment approach.

“We’re seeing that desmoplastic melanoma, which can be challenging to remove surgically, responds extremely well to immunotherapy,” said Dr. Antoni Ribas, the study’s senior author, a professor of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and director of the UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center’s Tumor Immunology Program. “We found that giving pembrolizumab before surgery is a powerful and safe approach that reduces the need for invasive procedures and improves long-term outcomes.”

Desmoplastic melanoma often develops on sun-exposed areas of skin, such as the head and neck, and grows deep into tissues, sometimes along nerves, making surgery challenging and potentially disfiguring. Historically, wide surgical excision followed by radiation has been the standard approach, while advanced disease was considered largely resistant to systemic therapies such as chemotherapy or immunotherapy. 

Building on earlier findings from cohort B of SWOG S1512, which showed that pembrolizumab shrank tumors in nearly 90% of patients with advanced, inoperable desmoplastic melanoma, the current study explored whether the therapy could also benefit patients with surgically removable tumors.

In this group of patients, known as cohort A, 28 patients with surgically resectable desmoplastic melanoma received three infusions of pembrolizumab over nine weeks prior to surgery. Researchers collected tissue samples before, during and after therapy to track tumor response. 

The team found that the treatment resulted in a high response rate, with 71% of patients receiving pembrolizumab having no detectable cancer at the time of surgery, and side effects were generally mild.

At the three-year follow-up, 95% of patients had not died from the disease, and 74% remained cancer-free.  

“Giving pembrolizumab before surgery led to very high rates of tumor clearance, few serious side effects, and excellent three-year survival for patients with this rare and difficult-to-treat cancer,” said Ribas, who is also director of the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy Center at UCLA and a member of the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA. “Taken together with our earlier findings in patients with advanced disease, these results represent a true shift in how desmoplastic melanoma is treated, moving away from repeated surgeries and radiation toward a single therapy that offers durable control, improved survival, and better quality of life.”  

The study was funded by grants from SWOG, National Institutes of Health and the National Cancer Institute. 

Dr. Kari Kendra, a SWOG investigator and medical oncologist with The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute, is the first author of the study. 

Other UCLA authors include Katie M. Campbell, Bartosz Chmielowski, Egmidio Medina, Cynthia R. Gonzalez, Ignacio Baselga-Carretero, Ivan Perez Garcilazo, Agustin Vega-Crespo, Jia Ming Chen and Nataly Naser Al-Deen. A full list of authors can be found in the study.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fossilized plankton study gives long-term hope for oxygen depleted oceans

2026-01-29
Key findings Arabian Sea was better oxygenated 16 million years ago than it is today, despite warmer climate conditions. Monsoons, ocean circulation, and ocean gateways play an important role, adding complexity as we try to predict future ocean oxygenation. In the very long-term, future sea oxygenation may improve, with unknown consequences for marine biology. A new study suggests the world’s oxygen depleted seas may have a chance of returning to higher oxygen concentrations in the centuries to come, despite our increasingly warming climate. Researchers at the University of Southampton (UK) and Rutgers University ...

Research clarifies record-late monsoon onset, aiding northern Australian communities

2026-01-29
Every year, Australia experiences a summer monsoon characterized by the reversal of winds, heavy rainfall and flooding. In 2024-2025 however, the Australian summer monsoon (ASM) was the latest on record since measurements began in 1957. The monsoon's timely arrival is critical for Northern Australia. It dictates water security for communities, drives pasture growth for the vital cattle industry and signals the end of the high bushfire risk period. The start of the ASM is defined by the change in prevailing dry southeasterly trade winds that occur most of the ...

Early signs of Parkinson’s can be identified in the blood

2026-01-29
A team led by researchers at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, has succeeded in identifying biomarkers for Parkinson’s disease in its earliest stages, before extensive brain damage has occurred. The biological processes leave measurable traces in the blood, but only for a limited period. The discovery thus reveals a window of opportunity that could be crucial for future treatment, but also for early diagnosis via blood tests, which could begin to be tested in healthcare within five years. Parkinson’s is an endemic disease with over 10 million people affected globally. As the world’s population grows older, this ...

Reducing drug deaths from novel psychoactive substances relies on foreign legislation, but here’s how it can be tackled closer to home

2026-01-29
by Ric Treble and Caroline Copeland The illicit drug trade is international, and different countries have developed different strategies intended to minimize its negative effects, most commonly through controls on, or prohibition of, specified substances. But which approaches to banning substances are actually most effective in reducing harm?  The advent of NPS, and the range of subsequent legislative controls introduced by different countries, has created a natural experiment. Using data from the UK’s National Programme on Substance Abuse Mortality ...

Conveying the concept of blue carbon in Japanese media: A new study provides insights

2026-01-29
Blue carbon refers to organic carbon captured and stored by the marine and vegetated coastal ecosystems such as mangrove forests, salt marshes, and seagrass meadows. These ecosystems act as powerful carbon sinks, sequestering carbon from the atmosphere efficiently like terrestrial forests. Recent focus on marine conservation has identified the blue carbon concept as an important factor, contributing to climate change mitigation and adaptation. While there is a rising interest in blue carbon among businesses and ...

New Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution study cautions that deep-sea fishing could undermine valuable tuna fisheries

2026-01-29
Woods Hole, Mass. (January 28, 2026) — A new study led by scientists at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), along with international partners, finds that proposed commercial fishing in the deep ocean could have serious consequences for bigeye tuna, one of the world’s most valuable and widely consumed fish. The study in Fisheries Management and Ecology shows that large-scale harvesting of mesopelagic fish –small, deep-sea species that live hundreds of meters below the surface –could reduce the food available to bigeye tuna, ultimately harming tuna populations ...

Embedding critical thinking from a young age

2026-01-29
Education systems need to focus more on independent critical thinking and rational, evidence-based learning and problem-solving to find answers to many of the unprecedented environmental, social and economic challenges facing humanity, experts say.     Scientists from around the world, including Flinders University microbiologist Dr Jake Robinson, have called for a radical refocus of school curricula from early years to high school to include more critical thinking and learning skills to empower students to ‘think outside the box’. “Cultivating deep, critical and systems-oriented thinking is no longer optional (but) ...

Study maps the climate-related evolution of modern kangaroos and wallabies

2026-01-29
The study, published in Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, resolves longstanding questions about when, and why, these iconic Australian marsupials diversified. First author PhD researcher Clelia Gauthier, from QUT’s School of Biology and Environmental Science, said the researchers found that the kangaroo family tree expanded in two major bursts over the past nine million years. “The first was during a late Miocene period of increasing dryness around 7-9 million years ago, and again in the Early Pliocene as grasslands began to emerge across the continent around 5-4.5 million years ago,” Ms Gauthier said. “Our ...

Researchers develop soft biodegradable implants for long-distance and wide-angle sensing

2026-01-29
In a study published in Nature, a team led by Prof. SU Yewang from the Institute of Mechanics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, along with Dr. LI Shuang from Tsinghua University and Prof. YU Xinge from the City University of Hong Kong, developed a soft, biodegradable, wireless sensing device which can monitor multiple signals from inside the body over long distances (e.g., 16 cm), while maintaining accuracy across varying positions and angles. Monitoring internal physiological signals is essential for effective ...

Early-life pollution leaves a multigenerational mark on fish skeletons

2026-01-29
By combining developmental assessments with advanced metabolomic profiling, the study reveals how early-life chemical stress rewires metabolism, disrupts growth programs, and leaves a hidden legacy of skeletal deformities. Benzo[a]pyrene is a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon widely detected in aquatic environments worldwide. Although its toxicity to developing fish has been documented, most studies focus on immediate or single-generation effects. In natural ecosystems, however, early-life exposure often coincides with sensitive developmental windows, raising concerns about inherited impacts ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Blood test “clocks” predict when Alzheimer’s symptoms will start

Second pregnancy uniquely alters the female brain

Study shows low-field MRI is feasible for breast screening

Nanodevice produces continuous electricity from evaporation

Call me invasive: New evidence confirms the status of the giant Asian mantis in Europe

Scientists discover a key mechanism regulating how oxytocin is released in the mouse brain

Public and patient involvement in research is a balancing act of power

Scientists discover “bacterial constipation,” a new disease caused by gut-drying bacteria

DGIST identifies “magic blueprint” for converting carbon dioxide into resources through atom-level catalyst design

COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy may help prevent preeclampsia

Menopausal hormone therapy not linked to increased risk of death

Chronic shortage of family doctors in England, reveals BMJ analysis

Booster jabs reduce the risks of COVID-19 deaths, study finds

Screening increases survival rate for stage IV breast cancer by 60%

ACC announces inaugural fellow for the Thad and Gerry Waites Rural Cardiovascular Research Fellowship

University of Oklahoma researchers develop durable hybrid materials for faster radiation detection

Medicaid disenrollment spikes at age 19, study finds

Turning agricultural waste into advanced materials: Review highlights how torrefaction could power a sustainable carbon future

New study warns emerging pollutants in livestock and aquaculture waste may threaten ecosystems and public health

Integrated rice–aquatic farming systems may hold the key to smarter nitrogen use and lower agricultural emissions

Hope for global banana farming in genetic discovery

Mirror image pheromones help beetles swipe right

Prenatal lead exposure related to worse cognitive function in adults

Research alert: Understanding substance use across the full spectrum of sexual identity

Pekingese, Shih Tzu and Staffordshire Bull Terrier among twelve dog breeds at risk of serious breathing condition

Selected dog breeds with most breathing trouble identified in new study

Interplay of class and gender may influence social judgments differently between cultures

Pollen counts can be predicted by machine learning models using meteorological data with more than 80% accuracy even a week ahead, for both grass and birch tree pollen, which could be key in effective

Rewriting our understanding of early hominin dispersal to Eurasia

Rising simultaneous wildfire risk compromises international firefighting efforts

[Press-News.org] Immunotherapy before surgery helps shrink tumors in patients with desmoplastic melanoma
New approach spares patients from more disfiguring surgeries or additional treatments