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Successful treatment with MEK‐inhibitor in a patient with NRAS ‐related cutaneous skeletal hypophosphatemia syndrome

Cutaneous skeletal hypophosphatemia syndrome (CSHS) is caused by somatic mosaic NRAS variants and characterized by melanocytic/sebaceous naevi, eye, and brain malformations, and FGF23‐mediated hypophosphatemic rickets. The MEK inhibitor Trametinib, acting on the RAS/MAPK pathway, is a candidate for...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Carli, Diana, Cardaropoli, Simona, Tessaris, Daniele, Coppo, Paola, La Selva, Roberta, Cesario, Claudia, Lepri, Francesca Romana, Pullano, Verdiana, Palumbo, Martina, Ramenghi, Ugo, Brusco, Alfredo, Medico, Enzo, De Sanctis, Luisa, Ferrero, Giovanni Battista, Mussa, Alessandro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9826313/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35999193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/gcc.23092
Descripción
Sumario:Cutaneous skeletal hypophosphatemia syndrome (CSHS) is caused by somatic mosaic NRAS variants and characterized by melanocytic/sebaceous naevi, eye, and brain malformations, and FGF23‐mediated hypophosphatemic rickets. The MEK inhibitor Trametinib, acting on the RAS/MAPK pathway, is a candidate for CSHS therapy. A 4‐year‐old boy with seborrheic nevus, eye choristoma, multiple hamartomas, brain malformation, pleural lymphangioma and chylothorax developed severe hypophosphatemic rickets unresponsive to phosphate supplementation. The c.182A > G;p.(Gln61Arg) somatic NRAS variant found in DNA from nevus biopsy allowed diagnosing CSHS. We administered Trametinib for 15 months investigating the transcriptional effects at different time points by whole blood RNA‐seq. Treatment resulted in prompt normalization of phosphatemia and phosphaturia, catch‐up growth, chylothorax regression, improvement of bone mineral density, reduction of epidermal nevus and hamartomas. Global RNA sequencing on peripheral blood mononucleate cells showed transcriptional changes under MEK inhibition consisting in a strong sustained downregulation of signatures related to RAS/MAPK, PI3 kinase, WNT and YAP/TAZ pathways, reverting previously defined transcriptomic signatures. CSHS was effectively treated with a MEK inhibitor with almost complete recovery of rickets and partial regression of the phenotype. We identified “core” genes modulated by MEK inhibition potentially serving as surrogate markers of Trametinib action.