The information on this site is not intended or implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Content within the patient forum is user-generated and has not been reviewed by medical professionals. Other sections of the Melanoma Research Foundation website include information that has been reviewed by medical professionals as appropriate. All medical decisions should be made in consultation with your doctor or other qualified medical professional.

Yervoy failed and now in his stomach

Forums Cutaneous Melanoma Community Yervoy failed and now in his stomach

  • Post
    Mom2Addy
    Participant

      My husband had SRS on two brain mets in Jan, surgery to remove 5 subcutaneous nodules and four treatments of Yervoy. His PET scan two weeks ago showed two additional nodules and something in his stomach. He had an endoscopy last Friday and a 24mm nodule removed which we found out today was positive for melanoma. Has anyone else had it in the stomach and if so, what course of treatment did you follow? Yes, we are with a melanoma specialist but won't see him until the week. He's also BRAF positive. Thank you! 

    Viewing 2 reply threads
    • Replies
        Bubbles
        Participant

          Sorry for this progression. I have not personally experienced this, but metastasis to the gut is sadly not uncommon with melanoma. Surgery can often be helpful, followed by an anti-PD1product. Sometimes BRAFi combined with MEKi can be used to rapidly shrink the tumor to the follow-up with a less invasive surgery or then simply shift to anti-PD1 after the tumors are decreased. Additionally, more and more folks are proving that combination BRAFi products, with alternative dosing schedules, are successfully using these products far longer than the 6-9 month duration that used to be the norm. I don't know which of these scenarios would be best for your husband….but these are the ones I would ask about. Wishing you my best. Celeste

          Bubbles
          Participant

            Sorry for this progression. I have not personally experienced this, but metastasis to the gut is sadly not uncommon with melanoma. Surgery can often be helpful, followed by an anti-PD1product. Sometimes BRAFi combined with MEKi can be used to rapidly shrink the tumor to the follow-up with a less invasive surgery or then simply shift to anti-PD1 after the tumors are decreased. Additionally, more and more folks are proving that combination BRAFi products, with alternative dosing schedules, are successfully using these products far longer than the 6-9 month duration that used to be the norm. I don't know which of these scenarios would be best for your husband….but these are the ones I would ask about. Wishing you my best. Celeste

            Bubbles
            Participant

              Sorry for this progression. I have not personally experienced this, but metastasis to the gut is sadly not uncommon with melanoma. Surgery can often be helpful, followed by an anti-PD1product. Sometimes BRAFi combined with MEKi can be used to rapidly shrink the tumor to the follow-up with a less invasive surgery or then simply shift to anti-PD1 after the tumors are decreased. Additionally, more and more folks are proving that combination BRAFi products, with alternative dosing schedules, are successfully using these products far longer than the 6-9 month duration that used to be the norm. I don't know which of these scenarios would be best for your husband….but these are the ones I would ask about. Wishing you my best. Celeste

          Viewing 2 reply threads
          • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
          About the MRF Patient Forum

          The MRF Patient Forum is the oldest and largest online community of people affected by melanoma. It is designed to provide peer support and information to caregivers, patients, family and friends. There is no better place to discuss different parts of your journey with this cancer and find the friends and support resources to make that journey more bearable.

          The information on the forum is open and accessible to everyone. To add a new topic or to post a reply, you must be a registered user. Please note that you will be able to post both topics and replies anonymously even though you are logged in. All posts must abide by MRF posting policies.

          Popular Topics