Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a minimally invasive therapeutic modality approved for clinical treatment of several types of cancer and non-oncological disorders. In PDT, a compound with photosensitising properties (photosensitiser, PS) is selectively accumulated in malignant tissues. The subsequent activation of the PS by visible light, preferentially in the red region of the visible spectrum (lambda>or=600 nm), where tissues are more permeable to light, generates reactive oxygen species, mainly singlet oxygen ((1)O(2)), responsible for cytotoxicity of neoplastic cells and tumour regression. There are three main mechanisms described by which (1)O(2) contributes to the destruction of tumours by PDT: direct cellular damage, vascular shutdown and activation of immune response against tumour cells. The advantages of PDT over other conventional cancer treatments are its low systemic toxicity and its ability to selectively destroy tumours accessible to light. Therefore, PDT is being used for the treatment of endoscopically accessible tumours such as lung, bladder, gastrointestinal and gynaecological neoplasms, and also in dermatology for the treatment of non-melanoma skin cancers (basal cell carcinoma) and precancerous diseases (actinic keratosis). Photofrin, ALA and its ester derivatives are the main compounds used in clinical trials, though newer and more efficient PSs are being evaluated nowadays.
Background
Despite the good prognosis of pediatric mastocytosis, some patients suffer from severe mast cell (MC) mediator-associated symptoms. The aim of this study was to identify predictors for severe MC mediator release symptoms in children with mastocytosis in the skin (MIS).
Methods
Serum baseline total tryptase (sbT) levels in 111 children with MIS – 80 maculopapular cutaneous mastocytosis/plaque mastocytosis, 22 nodular mastocytosis, and nine diffuse cutaneous mastocytosis – were investigated as a predictive biomarker for the occurrence of MC mediator-related signs and symptoms within the first 18 months after disease onset.
Results
Twelve children (11%) who showed extensive cutaneous disease involving >90% of body surface area (BSA) suffered from severe symptoms requiring hospitalization, with (n = 5) or without (n = 6) management in the intensive care unit (ICU) owing to life-threatening complications. The median sbT was significantly (P < 0.001) higher in patients with extensive cutaneous disease vs those with <90% of BSA involved (45.5 vs 5.2 µg/l, respectively), as well as in children with grade 4 (severe mastocytosis-related symptoms requiring emergency therapy and hospitalization) vs those with grade <4 (46.2 vs 5.2 µg/l, respectively). Receiver operating characteristics curve analyses showed that the optimal cutoff s for sbT to predict the need for daily antimediator therapy, hospitalization, and the management in an ICU were 6.6, 15.5, and 30.8 µg/l, respectively (sensitivity and specificity of 77% and 79%, 100% and 95%, and 100% and 96%, respectively).
Conclusions
Increased sbT in association with extensive cutaneous involvement identifies patients at risk for severe MC activation events in pediatric mastocytosis.
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