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Skin Cancer Treatment may Benefit Wound Healing

by Dr. Simi Paknikar on Aug 3 2016 5:36 PM
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Skin Cancer Treatment may Benefit Wound Healing
Highlights
  • Treatment of chronic wounds is a big challenge
  • BRAF inhibitors used in the treatment of skin cancer are associated with a side effect of increasing skin proliferation
  • This side effect can be potentially used to enhance wound healing in chronic wounds
A group of medications called BRAF inhibitors used in the treatment of a particular type of skin cancer may promote wound healing, according to a study conducted by researchers from the University of California and published in Nature Communications.

Chronic wounds due to injury or other causes interfere with the barrier function of the skin. They are difficult to treat and often require skin grafting. Application of a local medicine to promote the skin healing process would definitely make treatment simpler and less expensive. Researchers evaluated the topical use of an anticancer drug belonging to the group BRAF inhibitors called vemurafenib to aid the healing of skin wounds.

BRAF is a human gene which is capable of making a protein called B-Raf.The cancer-fighting BRAF inhibitors are drugs used for the treatment of a particular type of melanoma, a potentially lethal skin cancer that arises from the pigment cells of the skin. These drugs block a mutated gene in the cancer cells, thereby causing the tumor to shrink.

One of the main side effects of BRAF inhibitors is an excessive growth of skin. This occurs due to the activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway at the cellular level. This skin-related side effect of these drugs is being explored as a therapeutic potential – to help the skin to re-grow and aid in wound healing.

Researchers tested the wound healing benefits of vemurafenib in cell cultures as well as in animal studies. They found that:
  • Vemurafenib promotes skin growth in cell cultures grown in the laboratory
  • Vemurafenib aids wound healing when applied locally to a wound in animal studies
    • The benefits were observed in two mice models; in one model, an incision was made to create a wound and in another, circular wounds were made and were prevented from closing through skin contracture by attaching splinting rings
    • The drug mainly promotes proliferation of the skin cells called keratinocytes, which play an important role in wound healing
    • Various cellular and genetic signs associated with wound healing were noted in the skin samples obtained from these animal models
    • The benefit of wound healing was produced without giving rise to skin cancer
The enhanced proliferation of skin cells was inhibited by trametinib - mitogen activated protein kinase enzyme inhibitor (MEK inhibitor), which blocks the MAPK activation. This confirms that the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway is indeed responsible for the skin growth and thickening caused by vemurafenib.

The use of topical BRAF inhibitors is a promising prospect for the treatment of wounds. However, they are still in the testing process and there is still a long time before these drugs can be made available for use in humans for this purpose.

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References:
  1. Escuin-Ordinas H et al. Cutaneous Wound Healing Through Paradoxical MAPK Activation by BRAF Inhibitors. Nature Communications 7, Article number: 12348 doi:10.1038/ncomms12348
Source-Medindia


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