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Assessment of Mammalian Target of Rapamycin Pathway Activation in Basal Cell Carcinoma as a New Therapeutic Approach. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Targeting the mTOR pathway offers a new strategy for treating basal cell carcinoma (BCC), but its activation in human BCCs has been underexplored.
  • The study evaluated mTOR pathway activation in both sporadic and syndromic BCCs, revealing increased levels of specific markers associated with mTOR in affected tissues.
  • A case study showed that a pediatric patient with Gorlin syndrome experienced a reduction in BCC development after using topical sirolimus, suggesting its potential effectiveness and the need for further research on mTOR inhibitors in BCC treatment.

Article Abstract

Targeting the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway represents a potentially novel approach to treat basal cell carcinoma (BCC), but activation of this pathway has not been well described in human BCCs. The purpose of this study was to assess whether mTOR pathway activation occurs in BCCs (both sporadic and syndromic) and report a case of a patient with Gorlin syndrome (GS) whose clinically suspicious BCCs responded to mTOR inhibition through topical sirolimus treatment. After Stanford Institutional Review Board Approval, archived BCCs from patients with GS (n = 25), sporadic BCCs (n = 35), and control tissues were subjected to immunohistochemical analysis for the activation of mTOR pathway, and immunohistochemical staining intensity was evaluated by a dermatopathologist. BCCs (compared with normal skin) had elevated levels of eIF4EBP1 ( Padjusted = 0.0336), which is downstream of mTOR. a serine/threonine kinase Phospho-(AKT), which interacts with mTOR, was also significantly elevated (perinuclear: Padjusted < 0.0001; cytoplasmic: Padjusted = 0.0021). When off-label topical 1% sirolimus was used on a pediatric patient with GS, we noted reduction of new BCC development and decreased size of existing neoplasms clinically suspicious for BCCs. This treatment was well tolerated after 2 years of continuous use, with no other treatments needed during this period. Topical sirolimus is a promising therapeutic candidate against both sporadic and GS-associated BCC. Multicenter, prospective studies are needed to understand the efficacy and safety of topical mTOR inhibitors in BCC treatment, and ascertain whether the immunohistochemical markers downstream of mTOR could have predictive value in identifying BCCs most likely to respond to topical mTOR inhibitors, such as sirolimus.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11328919PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/DAD.0000000000002718DOI Listing

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