Literature DB >> 26242321

Phototoxicity of B-RAF inhibitors: Exclusively due to UVA radiation and rapidly regressive.

Romain Gabeff1, Hervé Dutartre1, Amir Khammari1, Aurélie Boisrobert1, Jean-Michel Nguyen1, Gaëlle Quereux1, Anabelle Brocard1, Mélanie Saint-Jean1, Lucie Peuvrel1, Brigitte Dreno1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: New targeted melanoma therapies such as B-RAF inhibitors have shown high and promising clinical benefit but have cutaneous side-effects, including photosensitivity, which is triggered in the UVA radiation spectrum. However, visible spectrum implication has not yet been investigated. We conducted a study to determine whether visible light also contributes to the phototoxicity action spectrum of vemurafenib. The secondary end points were to determine the time to complete regression of the phototoxicity post-vemurafenib discontinuation and whether there was a significant difference between the UVA radiation immediate reactivity cut-offs, in patients treated with vemurafenib vs. those treated with dabrafenib.
METHOD: This prospective, observational study included patients with B-RAF mutant metastatic melanoma: 34 patients treated with vemurafenib and 9 with dabrafenib.
RESULTS: The visible-light phototest results in patients treated with vemurafenib were all negative before and after 2 months of treatment. The UVA radiation phototests conducted 1 or 2 weeks post-vemurafenib discontinuation in 4 patients showed a normalised UVA-radiation reactivity cut-off. UVA radiation phototests after 2 months of treatment were conducted for all patients. The UVA radiation reactivity cut-off had been lowered for 30 patients (88%) on vemurafenib and 3 patients (33%) on dabrafenib. The median UVA radiation reactivity cut-off was 12 J/cm(2) for the patients on vemurafenib and 20 J/cm(2) for the patients on dabrafenib.
CONCLUSION: B-RAF inhibitor phototoxicity is exclusively triggered by UVA radiation and resolves rapidly post-treatment discontinuation. A significant difference between the UVA immediate reactivity cut-offs, vemurafenib vs. dabrafenib, explains the difference in the clinical photosensitivity rates reported in the clinical trials.

Entities:  

Keywords:  B-RAF inhibitors; dabrafenib; melanoma; phototoxicity; vemurafenib; visible light

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26242321     DOI: 10.1684/ejd.2015.2628

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Dermatol        ISSN: 1167-1122            Impact factor:   3.328


  2 in total

Review 1.  Cutaneous toxicities of new treatments for melanoma.

Authors:  A Boada; C Carrera; S Segura; H Collgros; P Pasquali; D Bodet; S Puig; J Malvehy
Journal:  Clin Transl Oncol       Date:  2018-05-24       Impact factor: 3.405

2.  Activation of TAp73 and inhibition of TrxR by Verteporfin for improved cancer therapy in TP53 mutant pancreatic tumors.

Authors:  Pilar Acedo; Aristi Fernandes; Joanna Zawacka-Pankau
Journal:  Future Sci OA       Date:  2019-01-18
  2 in total

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