Overview
Comprehensive FDA-approved therapies for Vulvar Cancer including targeted agents, immunotherapy, and combination regimens. Treatment approaches vary by molecular subtype, stage, and biomarker status.
Epidemiology & Impact
Vulvar cancer accounts for approximately 6,900 new cases and 1,630 deaths annually in the United States, representing about 6% of gynecologic malignancies. Incidence has been increasing, particularly among younger women, reflecting the rising prevalence of HPV infection. Two distinct pathways exist: HPV-associated vulvar cancer (approximately 40-60%, younger women, better prognosis) and HPV-independent vulvar cancer (older women, associated with lichen sclerosus and differentiated vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia, worse prognosis). Squamous cell carcinoma accounts for approximately 90% of vulvar malignancies. The median age at diagnosis is 68 years.
Molecular Biology & Biomarkers
HPV-positive vulvar SCC is driven by E6/E7 oncoproteins and typically has wild-type TP53 with p16 overexpression (used as a diagnostic surrogate for HPV status). HPV-negative vulvar SCC commonly harbors TP53 mutations and CDKN2A alterations. Both subtypes show PD-L1 expression, providing rationale for immunotherapy. PIK3CA mutations are found in approximately 15-20% of vulvar cancers. HER2 amplification occurs in a subset and is a potential therapeutic target. The molecular distinction between HPV-positive and HPV-negative vulvar cancer has prognostic implications and may guide future treatment strategies.
Evolving Treatment Landscape
Early-stage vulvar cancer is treated with surgical excision and sentinel lymph node biopsy, moving away from radical vulvectomy with bilateral inguinofemoral lymphadenectomy to more conservative approaches that reduce morbidity. For locally advanced disease, concurrent chemoradiation with cisplatin or 5-FU/mitomycin mirrors the approach used in anal cancer. For recurrent or metastatic disease, pembrolizumab has shown activity in PD-L1-positive vulvar SCC and is approved for MSI-H or TMB-high tumors through tumor-agnostic indications. Cemiplimab has also demonstrated encouraging results. The rarity of vulvar cancer has limited disease-specific clinical trial development, and treatment advances often draw from cervical and anal cancer paradigms.
Approved Vulvar Cancer Therapies
Note: There are no tumor-specific FDA-approved novel therapies for vulvar cancer. Treatment is primarily surgery, radiation, and platinum-based chemotherapy. Pembrolizumab is available via the MSI-H/TMB-H tumor-agnostic indication for eligible patients.
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQWhat is the HPV connection in vulvar cancer?
HPV causes approximately 40-60% of vulvar cancers, similar to cervical and anal cancer. HPV-positive vulvar cancers occur in younger women and have better prognosis. HPV vaccination is expected to reduce vulvar cancer incidence in coming decades.
How has vulvar cancer surgery evolved?
Treatment has moved from radical vulvectomy with extensive lymph node dissection toward more conservative excision with sentinel lymph node biopsy, significantly reducing surgical morbidity (lymphedema, wound complications) while maintaining oncologic outcomes.
What systemic treatments are available?
For advanced disease, cisplatin-based chemoradiation is standard for locally advanced tumors. Checkpoint immunotherapy (pembrolizumab, cemiplimab) provides options for recurrent/metastatic disease. Treatment approaches often follow cervical and anal cancer paradigms given shared HPV biology.
Active Clinical Trials
PHASE 3 Late-Stage Pivotal Trials
Limited Phase 3 Data
Standard: Surgery Β± radiation, chemotherapy for advanced
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PHASE 2 Efficacy and Safety Studies
Checkpoint Inhibitors
Drugs: Pembrolizumab, Nivolumab under investigation
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PHASE 1 First-in-Human Dose-Finding Studies
Phase 1 trials establish safety profiles and determine recommended doses for novel anticancer agents in early-stage development.
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Find Clinical Trials Near You
Interested in participating in a clinical trial? Visit ClinicalTrials.gov to search for trials by location, cancer type, and eligibility criteria. Discuss options with your oncologist to determine if clinical trial participation is appropriate for you.
Search ClinicalTrials.gov βπͺπΊ EU Clinical Pipeline (EudraCT Trials)
Active clinical trials registered in EU Clinical Trials Register
Phase 3 Trials
Late-stage European confirmatory trials
Phase 2 Trials
Mid-stage European efficacy trials
Phase 1 Trials
Early-stage European safety trials