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Modified LCH-III Regimen With or Without Luvometinib for Multisystem Pediatric Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis
Sponsor: West China Second University Hospital
Summary
Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) is the most common histiocytic disorder in children, caused by excessive proliferation and accumulation of Langerhans cells (a type of immune cell) in various body tissues. The annual incidence is about 2.6-8.9 cases per million children.Clinical presentation varies widely. Mild (low-risk) cases may resolve spontaneously or cause minimal issues with excellent outcomes. Severe multisystem LCH involves multiple organs, particularly high-risk sites such as liver, spleen, or bone marrow, leading to poorer prognosis and potential life-threatening complications without appropriate treatment.Standard first-line therapy for many children is prednisone (a corticosteroid) plus vinblastine (chemotherapy). Trials like LCH-III show near-100% survival in low-risk disease, but long-term survival drops to \~80% in high-risk cases. Reactivation occurs in \~37% of low-risk patients post-treatment, and \~50% of children eventually develop resistance, resulting in progression or relapse. Treatment failure heightens risks of long-term sequelae, including growth retardation, endocrine dysfunction, and neurological damage, severely impacting quality of life. More than half of LCH cases harbor the BRAF V600E mutation, activating the MAPK pathway abnormally. This has driven development of targeted MAPK inhibitors (e.g., vemurafenib, dabrafenib, trametinib), which demonstrate strong efficacy and acceptable safety (mainly manageable skin rash) in relapsed/refractory pediatric cases, with no reported secondary malignancies to date. These agents provide rapid symptom relief and durable control, though monotherapy often fails to eradicate abnormal cells in multisystem disease, leading to relapse after discontinuation. No MAPK inhibitors were previously approved specifically for LCH. In 2025, luvometinib (developed by Fosun Pharma, China; a selective MEK1/2 inhibitor) received approval in China for adult LCH and histiocytic neoplasms. Adult studies showed \~83% objective response rate and \~74% progression-free at ≥12 months, with mostly mild side effects (skin issues, hypertriglyceridemia) and no discontinuations due to serious toxicity. Laboratory evidence indicates MAPK overactivation confers apoptosis resistance to LCH cells; combining MAPK inhibitors with chemotherapy may enhance cell killing and leverage chemotherapy-induced immune microenvironment changes for better clearance. Small studies and real-world data in refractory LCH support this: combination regimens yielded low relapse rates (especially with prolonged therapy), 100% responses in some pediatric cohorts with sustained remission and no added severe toxicity, and notably lower relapse (20% vs 75% with inhibitor alone) in our center's early experience with LCH-III backbone plus MAPK inhibitor. This multicenter randomized trial will enroll children with multisystem LCH, assigning them to modified standard LCH-III chemotherapy alone or the same regimen combined with luvometinib, to evaluate whether adding this targeted agent improves outcomes.
Official title: Modified LCH-III Regimen Versus Modified LCH-III Regimen Combined With Luvometinib in the Treatment of Multisystem Pediatric Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis: A Multicenter, Open-Label, Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
0 Years - 18 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
120
Start Date
2026-02-13
Completion Date
2030-12-31
Last Updated
2026-02-24
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Prednisone
Corticosteroid administered orally as part of the modified LCH-III regimen
Vincristine
Intravenous vinca alkaloid chemotherapy agent used in the modified LCH-III regimen
Mercaptopurine
Oral purine analog antimetabolite used in the maintenance phase of therapy for multisystem LCH
Luvometinib
Oral selective MEK1/2 inhibitor added to the experimental arm. Administered daily in combination with modified LCH-III chemotherapy for multisystem Langerhans cell histiocytosis.
Locations (11)
West China Second Hospital, Sichuan University
Chengdu, China
Affiliated Hospital of Guizhou Medical University
Guiyang, China
Anhui Provincial Children's Hospital
Hefei, China
The Second Affiliated Hospital of Anhui Medical University
Hefei, China
Jiangxi Provincial Children's Hospital
Jiangxi, China
Kunming Children's Hospital
Kunming, China
The Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangxi Medical University
Nanning, China
The First Affiliated Hospital of Xinjiang Medical University
Ürümqi, China
Xi'an Children's Hospital
Xi'an, China
Xi'an Northwest Women's and Children's Hospital
Xi'an, China
Zunyi Medical University Affiliated Hospital, Guizhou Provincial Children's Hospital
Zunyi, China