Publication | Open Access
Successful treatment with <scp>MEK</scp>‐inhibitor in a patient with <scp><i>NRAS</i></scp>‐related cutaneous skeletal hypophosphatemia syndrome
26
Citations
11
References
2022
Year
SclerostinSuccessful TreatmentImmunologyPathologyDermatologyOsteoporosisBone Morphogenic ProteinBrain MalformationReceptor Tyrosine KinaseParathyroid HormoneNeuropathologyRheumatologyCshs TherapySystemic SclerodermaSclerodermaNeuromuscular DisordersNevus BiopsyUrologyMedicine
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.
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