CVD (Cisplatin, Vinblastine, Dacarbazine) is a chemotherapy regimen historically used in metastatic melanoma before the immunotherapy era. It has largely been replaced by checkpoint inhibitors (nivolumab, pembrolizumab, ipilimumab) but may still be used in refractory cases.
Metastatic melanoma (historical use; largely superseded by immunotherapy and targeted therapy). May be considered in patients who have progressed on or are ineligible for immune checkpoint inhibitors and BRAF/MEK inhibitors.
CVD regimen (every 21 days):
Cisplatin 20 mg/m² IV Days 1–4.
Vinblastine 1.6 mg/m² IV Days 1–4.
Dacarbazine 800 mg/m² IV Day 1.
Biochemotherapy variant: CVD + IL-2 + interferon-alpha (higher response rate but greater toxicity). Aggressive hydration required with cisplatin.
Nausea/Vomiting (85%), Neutropenia (60%), Fatigue (65%), Peripheral neuropathy (35%), Alopecia (40%), Constipation (20%), Ototoxicity (15%), Nephrotoxicity (10%)
Adverse reaction frequencies reflect combination regimen data. Consult individual prescribing information for complete details.
CVD combines three mechanisms: Cisplatin forms intrastrand and interstrand DNA cross-links, inhibiting DNA synthesis. Vinblastine binds to tubulin, inhibiting microtubule polymerization and causing mitotic arrest. Dacarbazine is an alkylating agent that methylates DNA, causing strand breaks and inhibiting replication. The combination achieves multi-pathway cytotoxicity in melanoma cells.