The BRAF-V600E gene is a protein kinase involved in regulation of the mitogen activated protein kinase pathway (MAPK/MEK) and downstream extracellular receptor kinase (ERK). The BRAF-V600E mutation has a significant… Click to show full abstract
The BRAF-V600E gene is a protein kinase involved in regulation of the mitogen activated protein kinase pathway (MAPK/MEK) and downstream extracellular receptor kinase (ERK). The BRAF-V600E mutation has a significant role in the progression of pediatric brain tumors. 85% of pediatric CNS tumors express the BRAF mutation. Thus, BRAF targeted therapy in pediatric CNS malignancies has potential to become the standard of care for tumors expressing this mutation. Current pediatric CNS brain tumor treatment focuses on chemotherapy and radiation, causing significant toxic side effects for patients. The significance of this case series lies in relaying our experience using targeted therapy in BRAF-V600E positive CNS pediatric brain tumors. We followed the disease course, progression, and treatment of three pediatric patients with three different CNS tumors. Each of these individuals was treated with surgical resection, chemotherapy, and/or radiation as per standard protocol. When that modality failed to reduce tumor progression, we found that each of their different tumors was BRAF-V600E positive and they were all started on targeted therapy. Vemurafenib, Dabrafenib, and Trametinib are BRAF-V600E/MEK inhibitors that were initially used to treat melanomas. However, more research has shown that various pediatric CNS tumors are BRAF-V600 positive. Therapy with these BRAF inhibitors has been shown to slow tumor progression, but toxicity can be severe. This case series shows one patient with successful tumor regression, one patient with prolonged disease stabilization, and one patient with initial response but subsequent progression and ultimate death. It has been shown that using BRAF inhibitors in lower grade CNS tumors are more effective than higher grade CNS tumors. The success of Vemurafenib and Dabrafenib/Trametinib in causing pediatric CNS tumor regression is promising, but further studies are needed to solidify their role in pediatric CNS cancers.
               
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