| Literature DB >> 31666933 |
Mayank Rao1, Meenakshi Bhattacharjee2, Scott Shepard3, Sigmund Hsu1.
Abstract
We report a case of a patient with newly diagnosed, locally extensive and cystic, suprasellar papillary craniopharyngioma successfully treated with single-agent Dabrafenib. The patient was symptomatic with gait imbalance with falls, lethargic episodes, fatigue and incontinence. Diagnostic imaging demonstrated a cystic suprasellar tumor extending into the third ventricle causing obstructive hydrocephalus. The tumor was partially debulked, and bilateral shunts were placed. NGS sequencing demonstrated BRAF V600E mutation, and the patient was prescribed dual agent Dabrafenib and Trametinib. However, due to insurance denial for Trametinib, he only received single-agent Dabrafenib (150mg BID). The treatment resulted in a major response (over two years), including reduction of the tumor cyst, and improvement of the clinical symptoms. No adverse events have been reported. The patient continues on Dabrafenib (150 mg BID) with a steady reduction in tumor size, and improvement in cognitive function leading to independent living. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: BRAF V600E; craniopharyngioma; dabrafenib; neuro-oncology; papillary
Year: 2019 PMID: 31666933 PMCID: PMC6800270 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.27203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Summary of papillary craniopharyngioma targeted therapy case reports
| Newly diagnosed or recurrent PCP | Treatment with | Treatment duration | % reduction in tumor size (volume) | Toxicity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recurrent | Dabrafenib (150 mg BID) and
| 1.1 months (35 days) | 85% | Low grade fever | Brastianos, et al. (2015) [ |
| Recurrent | Dabrafenib (150 mg BID) and
| 7 months | >75% | Low grade fever | Odia, et al. (2017) [ |
| Recurrent | Dabrafenib (150 mg BID) and
| 3.4 months (15 weeks) | 91% | Low grade fever | Gudjonsson, et al. (2017) [ |
| Recurrent | Vemurafenib (960mg BID) | 3 months | Near complete resolution of PCP | NA | Aylwin, et al. (2016) [ |
| Recurrent | Dabrafenib (150 mg BID, then dose reduced for toxicity to 225mg QD) | 9 months | Marked reduction (>50%) after 9 months of therapy and patient remained stable post 1 year of Dabrafenib cessation | Joint pain | Uhm, et al. (2018) [ |
Figure 1MRI brain before BRAF inhibitor was introduced (both A & B)
B/L posterior distortions are the result of B/L shunts for hydrocephalus (left) and (right) respectively. MRI on the right (B) showed an increase in the size of the residual suprasellar craniopharyngioma (48 x 53 x 29 mm) predominantly due to an increase in the size of the cystic component. After BRAF inhibitor was introduced, MRI brain was done at two-month intervals. MRI in the bottom left (C) shows partial response with a significant reduction in the solid tumor. MRI in the bottom middle (D) was a year after treatment. It shows the patient's solid internal nodular enhancement, and his cyst completely resolved as compared to the original MRI (A) in the top left from February 2016. Starting May 2017, the MRIs were performed every six months. The right bottom MRI (E) continued shrinkage of the patient's suprasellar cystic lesion. It was two years after being on single-agent Dabrafenib.