Preferences of Dermato-oncologists for Adjuvant Therapy in Stage II Melanoma: A Nationwide Discrete Choice Experiment
Clinical Summary
View sourceWhat was studied
A nationwide discrete choice experiment surveyed 112 German dermato-oncologists about adjuvant therapy choices for stage IIB/C melanoma using two patient profiles (55-year-old stage IIB; 83-year-old stage IIC with comorbidities) and scenarios varying first‑year recurrence risk (5–15%), severe AE risk (10–30%), AE type, and administration mode.
Key findings
Physicians chose adjuvant therapy over opt-out in 86.4% of scenarios for the younger patient and 60.5% for the older patient; when asked explicitly, 88.4% vs 56.3% would recommend treatment (p=0.008). Risk of severe AEs carried the greatest weight (RIS 40.2 for the younger vs 53.6 for the older; p<0.001), recurrence risk was next (RIS 36.3 vs 21.8; p<0.001); immune-related AEs were less acceptable than gastrointestinal/pyrexia (PWU −18.9/−21.7 vs 18.9/21.7), and infusions every 3–6 weeks were preferred over oral regimens (e.g., PWU 14.3/17.5 vs −8.5/0.7 and −15.8/−21.9).
Study limitations
Single-country (Germany) stated-preference survey using hypothetical scenarios with a limited set of attributes may not mirror real-world decisions. An oral adjuvant option was included although the COLUMBUS-AD trial was terminated, so this route may not be available for stage II.
Clinical implications
In stage IIB/C melanoma, many dermato-oncologists prioritize avoiding severe AEs—especially in older, comorbid patients—and prefer infusions at longer intervals over high-pill oral regimens; use these patterns to guide balanced, shared decision-making aligned with patient goals.
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