AI Article Synopsis

  • - Proteus syndrome (PS) is a rare disease caused by a mutation in the AKT1 oncogene, leading to serious health issues, including a higher risk of cancer and progressive body overgrowth.
  • - A teenage patient with severe PS developed low-grade serous ovarian carcinoma and was treated with miransertib, an AKT inhibitor, which resulted in complete cancer remission and improved quality of life.
  • - This case highlights the potential for targeted, personalized medicine to treat ultra-rare diseases by successfully addressing both benign and malignant conditions sharing the same genetic mutation.

Article Abstract

Proteus syndrome (PS) is an ultra-rare disease characterized by progressive, disproportionate, segmental overgrowth caused by a somatic gain-of-function mutation p.Glu17Lys in the oncogene AKT1. The disease has high morbidity and mortality rates due to the increased risk for patients to develop cancer and progressive overgrowth. A teenage patient with severe PS phenotype developed a pelvic recurrence of low-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (LGSOC). Taking into consideration, recent results of the use of AKT inhibitors both in PS and AKT-mutant cancers, we treated the patient on a compassionate basis, with miransertib (ARQ 092), a potent, selective, allosteric AKT inhibitor. Targeted deep sequencing assay of PI3K/AKT pathway genes of the affected overgrowth lesion (cerebriform connective tissue nevus) and the tumor tissues detected the same activating AKT1 mutation in both. Treatment with miransertib led to a complete remission of the cancer and a significant improvement in the patients' everyday life. The treatment is still ongoing at 22 months. This is the first report showing the therapeutic effects of an AKT inhibitor on both benign and malignant tissues that harbor the same pathogenic AKT1 mutation. The present article showed that personalized medicine is feasible in ultra-rare diseases.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.61160DOI Listing

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