| Literature DB >> 29695767 |
Robert J Allaway1, Sara J C Gosline1, Salvatore La Rosa2, Pamela Knight2, Annette Bakker2, Justin Guinney1, Lu Q Le3.
Abstract
Cutaneous neurofibromas (cNF) are a nearly ubiquitous symptom of neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), a disorder with a broad phenotypic spectrum caused by germline mutation of the neurofibromatosis type 1 tumour suppressor gene (NF1). Symptoms of NF1 can include learning disabilities, bone abnormalities and predisposition to tumours such as cNFs, plexiform neurofibromas, malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumours and optic nerve tumours. There are no therapies currently approved for cNFs aside from elective surgery, and the molecular aetiology of cNF remains relatively uncharacterised. Furthermore, whereas the biallelic inactivation of NF1 in neoplastic Schwann cells is critical for cNF formation, it is still unclear which additional genetic, transcriptional, epigenetic, microenvironmental or endocrine changes are important. Significant inroads have been made into cNF understanding, including NF1 genotype-phenotype correlations in NF1 microdeletion patients, the identification of recurring somatic mutations, studies of cNF-invading mast cells and macrophages, and clinical trials of putative therapeutic targets such as mTOR, MEK and c-KIT. Despite these advances, several gaps remain in our knowledge of the associated pathogenesis, which is further hampered by a lack of translationally relevant animal models. Some of these questions may be addressed in part by the adoption of genomic analysis techniques. Understanding the aetiology of cNF at the genomic level may assist in the development of new therapies for cNF, and may also contribute to a greater understanding of NF1/RAS signalling in cancers beyond those associated with NF1. Here, we summarise the present understanding of cNF biology, including the pathogenesis, mutational landscape, contribution of the tumour microenvironment and endocrine signalling, and the historical and current state of clinical trials for cNF. We also highlight open access data resources and potential avenues for future research that leverage recently developed genomics-based methods in cancer research.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29695767 PMCID: PMC6008439 DOI: 10.1038/s41416-018-0073-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Fig. 1Cutaneous neurofibromas in NF1 patients. Cutaneous neurofibromas occur in nearly all NF1 patients, but they present with great diversity in both tumour frequency and tumour size.[13–16] These tumours represent one of the most challenging burdens for neurofibromatosis type 1 patients.[15,16,19] Images are used with patient permission
Fig. 2The RAS signalling cascade and tumour microenvironment in cNF. a Loss of NF1 reduces the ability of Ras to hydrolyse GTP and shift from an active to a GDP-bound inactive state. Consequently, Schwann cells lacking NF1 have increased proliferation and altered transcription (RAF-MEK-ERK signalling) and increased prosurvival signalling (PI3K-mTOR). b The cNF microenvironment is composed of NF1-deficient Schwann cells, mast cells, fibroblasts, macrophages and neurons, among other cell types. While roles for some of these cell types have been studied or hypothesised, particularly with regard to mast cells, the bulk of these cellular interactions are poorly understood or unstudied
Clinical trials for cutaneous neurofibromas (arranged chronologically by first received date)
| ClinicalTrials.gov ID | Study name | Recruitment status | Intervention | Mechanism | Phase | First received | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT03090971 | Use of topical liquid diclofenac following laser microporation of cutaneous neurofibromas in patients with NF1 | Active, not recruiting | Diclofenac sodium | NSAID | Phase 2 | March 2017 |
[ |
| NCT02839720 | Selumetinib in treating patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 and dermal neurofibroma | Not yet recruiting | Selumetinib | MEK | Phase 2 | July 2016 |
[ |
| NCT02728388 | Photodynamic therapy for benign dermal neurofibromas | Recruiting | Levulan kerastick | Photosensitizer | Phase 2 | March 2016 |
[ |
| NCT02332902 | Everolimus for treatment of disfiguring cutaneous lesions in NF1 | Completed | Everolimus | mTOR | Phase 2 | December 2014 |
[ |
| NCT01682811 | Photodynamic therapy (PDT) for benign dermal neurofibromas (NF1) | Active, not recruiting | Levulan (5-aminolevulinic acid) | Photosensitizer | Phase 1 | September 2012 |
[ |
| NCT01412892 | Use of RAD001 as monotherapy in the treatment of neurofibromatosis 1 related internal plexiform neurofibromas | Completed | RAD001 (everolimus) | mTOR | Phase 2 | August 2011 |
[ |
| NCT01031901 | Topical rapamycin therapy to alleviate cutaneous manifestations of tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) and neurofibromatosis I (NF1) | Completed | Skinercity plus sirolimus (rapamycin) | mTOR | Phase 1 | December 2009 |
[ |
| NCT00865644 | Topical imiquimod 5% cream for treatment of cutaneous neurofibromas in adults with NF1 | Completed | Imiquimod 5% cream | TLR 7/8 | Phase 1 | March 2009 |
[ |
| NCT00657202 | Ranibizumab for neurofibromas associated with NF1 | Completed | Ranibizumab (lucentis) | VEGF | Early Phase 1 | March 2008 |
[ |
Many modern clinical cNF trials rely on specific molecular targets that are relevant to NF1 tumour biology. Oncogenomics-oriented studies that identify key molecular mediators of cNF growth and development will aid the selection of interventions for future cNF clinical trials
Resources for cutaneous neurofibroma research
| Resource | Resource type | URL |
|---|---|---|
| Neurofibromatosis Therapeutic Acceleration Program (NTAP) cNF Initiative | Funding agency, working group |
|
| Children’s Tumor Foundation (CTF) | Funding agency, tissue repository |
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| Giorgio Foundation | Funding agency, research consortium |
|
| Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programmes Neurofibromatosis Research Program (CDMRP NFRP) | Funding agency, reagent repository |
|
| CTF cNF Data Resource | Data repository |
|
| Response Evaluation in Neurofibromatosis and Schwannomatosis (REiNS) cNF Collaboration | Working group |
|
Funding agencies, working groups, consortia and publicly accessible repositories of data and reagents are included