| Literature DB >> 30488019 |
Francesca Del Bufalo1, Giulia Ceglie1, Antonella Cacchione1, Iside Alessi1, Giovanna Stefania Colafati2, Andrea Carai3, Francesca Diomedi-Camassei4, Emmanuel De Billy1, Emanuele Agolini5, Angela Mastronuzzi1, Franco Locatelli1,6.
Abstract
Low-grade gliomas (LGG) are the most common central nervous system tumors in children. Prognosis depends on complete surgical resection. For patients not amenable of gross total resection (GTR) new approaches are needed. The BRAF mutation V600E is critical for the pathogenesis of pediatric gliomas and specific inhibitors of the mutated protein, such as Vemurafenib, are available. We investigated the safety and efficacy of Vemurafenib as single agent in pediatric patients with V600E+ LGG. From November 2013 to May 2018, 7 patients have been treated in our Institution; treatment was well-tolerated, the main concern being dermatological toxicity. The best responses to treatment were: 1 complete response, 3 partial responses, 1 stable disease, only one patient progressed; in one patient, the follow-up is too short to establish the clinical response. Two patients discontinued treatment, and, in both cases, immediate progression of the disease was observed. In one case the treatment was discontinued due to toxicity, in the other one the previously assessed BRAF V600E mutation was not confirmed by further investigation. Two patients, after obtaining a response, progressed during treatment, suggesting the occurrence of resistance mechanisms. Clinical response, with improvement of the neurologic function, was observed in all patients a few weeks after the therapy was started. Despite the limitations inherent to a small and heterogeneous cohort, this experience, suggests that Vemurafenib represents a treatment option in pediatric patients affected by LGG and carrying BRAF mutation V600E.Entities:
Keywords: low-grade gliomas; pediatric central nervous system tumors; pediatric neuro-oncology; targeted therapies; vemurafenib
Year: 2018 PMID: 30488019 PMCID: PMC6246660 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2018.00526
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1BRAFV600E immunohistochemistry in tumor samples of patients' series and in normal cerebellar parenchyma (small neurons of cortical molecular layer, Purkinje cells and underlining white mater resulted negative). Magnifications: Pt. 1 20x, Pts. 2-7 40x, Neg. 20x. 3,3′-diaminobenzidine-tetrahydrochloride-dihydrate (DAB) substrate for Pt.1 and alkaline phosphatase substrate for Pts. 2-7 and negative control. Hematoxylin counterstain in all samples.
Clinical-pathological characteristics of patients and BRAFV600E immunostain intensity.
| Age (months) | 28 m | 54 m | 1 m | 108 m | 89 m | 122 m | 125 m |
| Site | Cervico-medullary | Vermis + cerebellar hemisphere | Medulla oblongata | Midbrain | Medulla oblongata | Midbrain | Optic chiasm |
| Histology | GG | GG | Ganglioneurocytoma | PXA | GG | GG | Pylocitic Astrocytoma |
| BRAFV600E IHC | ++ | ++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | + |
| Surgery | Biopsy | Partial resection | Partial resection | Partial resection | Partial resection | Partial resection | Partial resection |
| Previous CT | SIOP LGG 2004 | No | No | No | No | No | No |
| Max dose | 960 mg/day | 480 mg/day | 240 mg/day | 960 mg/day | 480 mg/day | 480 mg/day | 960 mg/day |
| Toxicity | Skin (grade 3) | No | No | Skin (grade 1) | Skin (grade 1) | Skin (grade 1) | Skin (grade 2) |
| Best response | PR | CR | PD | PR | SD | Insufficient follow-up | Treatment stopped for BRAFV600E negativity at Sanger Sequencing |
| Follow-up/(months) | 54 m | 40 m | 4 m | 30 m | 13 m | 2 m | 24 m |
| Duration of treatment (months) | 54 m | 40 m | 3 m | 30 m | 13 m | 2 m | 9 m |
Pt 4 is also affected by constitutional chromosome 21 trisomy.
SIOP-LGG 2004: (Vincristine, Carboplatin, Etoposide). Acronyms: GG, ganglioglioma; PXA, pleomorphic xantoastrocytomas; IHC, immunohistochemistry; CT, Chemotherapy; PR, Partial Response; CR, Complete Response; PD, Progressive Disease; SD, Stable Disease.
Figure 2RMN imaging pre- and post- Vemurafenib (best response) and at relapse/progression after Vemurafenib of pts 1 and 2.