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3
Pathophys.
9
Phenotypes
5
Pathograph
3
Genes
5
Treatments
6
Subtypes
1
Deep Research

Subtypes

6
Single-system, unifocal LCH
Solitary lesion involving a single organ system, most often bone (historically "eosinophilic granuloma"). Usually has an excellent prognosis and may regress spontaneously or after curettage.
Single-system, multifocal LCH
Multiple lesions confined to a single organ system, typically multifocal bone disease. Intermediate clinical behavior between unifocal and multisystem disease.
Multisystem LCH without risk-organ involvement
Multisystem disease without involvement of liver, spleen, or hematopoietic system. Generally favorable prognosis with appropriate systemic therapy.
Multisystem LCH with risk-organ involvement
Multisystem disease involving one or more risk organs (liver, spleen, hematopoietic system). Historically labeled "Letterer-Siwe disease". Associated with the highest mortality and requires intensive systemic therapy.
Isolated pulmonary LCH
Adult-predominant form strongly associated with cigarette smoking, characterized by upper-lobe nodules progressing to cystic lung disease. Pulmonary LCH is frequently polyclonal/reactive but can also harbor BRAF V600E and behave as a clonal neoplasm.
LCH-associated neurodegeneration
Progressive cerebellar and brainstem neurodegeneration occurring in a subset of patients, often years after initial diagnosis. Associated with circulating BRAF V600E-mutant myeloid precursors infiltrating the CNS.

Pathophysiology

3
MAPK/ERK Pathway Activation
Constitutive activation of the MAPK/ERK signaling pathway in CD1a+/CD207+ myeloid precursors drives clonal proliferation and differentiation arrest. BRAF V600E is the most common single driver, followed by MAP2K1 (MEK1) in-frame deletions and point mutations, with NRAS, KRAS, ARAF, and MAP3K1 mutations accounting for most remaining cases. Together these mutations occur in essentially all LCH lesions, establishing LCH as a clonal MAPK-pathway myeloid neoplasm.
Langerhans cell link
MAPK cascade link ↑ INCREASED ERK1 and ERK2 cascade link ↑ INCREASED
Show evidence (3 references)
PMID:33935037 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"Activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway is a key molecular mechanism involved in the development of LCH."
Review establishing constitutive MAPK pathway activation as the central molecular mechanism driving LCH pathogenesis.
PMID:36083130 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"MAPK pathway gene alterations were detected in 300 (79.6%) patients, including 191 (50.7%) with BRAFV600E, 54 with MAP2K1 mutations, 39 with BRAF exon 12 mutations, 13 with rare BRAF alterations, and 3 with ARAF or KRAS mutations."
Large international cohort of 377 children quantifying the MAPK pathway mutation spectrum and confirming MAPK alterations are present in nearly 80% of childhood LCH lesions.
PMID:25430560 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"LCH occurs as a consequence of a misguided differentiation programme of myeloid dendritic cell precursors."
Conceptual framework establishing LCH as a misguided myeloid differentiation disorder, with ERK pathway activation at specific myeloid differentiation stages defining clinical extent.
Clonal histiocyte accumulation and tissue infiltration
MAPK-activated precursors expand and accumulate in target tissues (bone, skin, lung, pituitary, liver, spleen, bone marrow, CNS), where they recruit secondary inflammatory cells and produce a characteristic granulomatous lesion. Lesional cells exhibit Langerhans-cell phenotype (CD1a+, CD207+/Langerin+, S100+) and contain Birbeck granules.
Langerhans cell link
cell population proliferation link ↑ INCREASED
Show evidence (1 reference)
PMID:32750121 SUPPORT In Vitro
"CD34+c-Kit+Flt3+ cells from BM of MS-RO+ LCH patients produced Langerhans cell (LC)-like cells in vitro. Both LC-like and DC offspring from this progenitor carried the BRAF mutation, confirming their common origin."
Functional demonstration that bone marrow CD34+c-Kit+Flt3+ myeloid progenitors carry the driver mutation and give rise to lesional LC-like cells, establishing the myeloid precursor origin of LCH cells.
T cell exhaustion and immune checkpoint evasion
MAPK-hyperactivated lesional dendritic cells recruit T lymphocytes into LCH granulomas, where both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells develop an exhausted phenotype with high expression of immune checkpoint receptors (e.g., PD-1), while LCH dendritic cells upregulate matching checkpoint ligands. Intralesional CD8+ T cells show blunted cytokine production and impaired effector function, providing a rationale for combined MAPK + immune-checkpoint inhibition.
CD8-positive, alpha-beta T cell link
Exhausted T cell differentiation link ↑ INCREASED
Show evidence (1 reference)
PMID:33075814 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"Both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells exhibited "exhausted" phenotypes with high expression of the immune checkpoint receptors. LCH DCs showed robust expression of ligands to checkpoint receptors."
Direct phenotypic analysis of T cells in human LCH lesions documenting checkpoint-receptor-driven T cell exhaustion as a central immune-evasion mechanism in LCH.

Pathograph

Use the checkboxes to hide or show graph categories. Hover nodes for evidence and cross-linked metadata.
Pathograph: causal mechanism network for Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis Interactive directed graph showing how pathophysiology mechanisms, phenotypes, genetic factors and variants, experimental models, environmental triggers, and treatments relate through causal and linked edges.

Phenotypes

9
Blood 1
Cytopenias Pancytopenia (HP:0001876)
Cardiovascular 1
Splenomegaly Splenomegaly (HP:0001744)
Digestive 2
Hepatomegaly Hepatomegaly (HP:0002240)
Sclerosing cholangitis Sclerosing cholangitis (HP:0030991)
Endocrine 1
Central diabetes insipidus Central diabetes insipidus (HP:0000863)
Show evidence (1 reference)
PMID:34167121 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"The most common central nervous system (CNS) manifestation in LCH is the infiltration of the hypothalamic-pituitary region leading to destruction and neurodegeneration of CNS tissue. The latter causes the most frequent endocrinological manifestation, that is, central diabetes insipidus (CDI),..."
Establishes central diabetes insipidus as the most frequent endocrine manifestation of LCH, with reported incidence 11.5-24%, caused by LCH infiltration of the hypothalamic-pituitary region.
Immune 1
Seborrheic-like skin rash Skin rash (HP:0000988)
Musculoskeletal 1
Lytic bone lesion Osteolysis (HP:0002797)
Nervous System 1
Cerebellar neurodegeneration Cerebellar atrophy (HP:0001272)
Other 1
Pulmonary cysts Pulmonary cyst (HP:0032445)
Show evidence (1 reference)
PMID:24482091 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"96% current or ex-smokers."
UK PLCH registry of 67 cases documenting that 96% of pulmonary LCH patients are current or former cigarette smokers, establishing the strong smoking association of adult pulmonary LCH.
🧬

Genetic Associations

3
BRAF V600E
Show evidence (2 references)
PMID:38749502 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"A total of 30 genomic alterations in 5 genes of the MAPK pathway were identified in 187 of 223 patients (83.9%). BRAF V600E (B-Raf proto-oncogene, serine/threonine kinase) was the most common mutation (51.6%)"
Pediatric cohort of 223 LCH patients establishing BRAF V600E as the single most common driver, present in 51.6% of cases.
PMID:39513946 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"MAPK/PI3K pathway alterations were observed in 77.6% (n = 197) of the patients. BRAFV600E mutation was the most common (30.7%, n = 78), followed by BRAFindel (18.1%, n = 46) and MAP2K1 mutations (12.6%, n = 32)."
Adult cohort of 254 LCH patients showing BRAF V600E remains the most common driver in adults (30.7%) but at lower frequency than in pediatric disease, with BRAFindel as a frequent alternative MAPK lesion in adults.
MAP2K1
Show evidence (1 reference)
PMID:38749502 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"BRAF V600E (B-Raf proto-oncogene, serine/threonine kinase) was the most common mutation (51.6%), followed by MAP2K1 (mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 1) alterations (17.0%)"
Pediatric cohort showing MAP2K1 as the second most common driver after BRAF V600E, present in 17.0% of cases.
ARAF
Show evidence (1 reference)
PMID:38749502 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"ARAF (A-Raf proto-oncogene, serine/threonine kinase) and KRAS (KRAS proto-oncogene, GTPase) mutations were relatively rare (2.2% and 0.9%, respectively)."
Pediatric cohort quantifying ARAF as a rare alternative MAPK pathway driver in LCH (~2% of cases).
💊

Treatments

5
Vinblastine and Prednisone
Action: chemotherapy MAXO:0000647
Agent: vinblastine prednisone
Standard frontline systemic therapy for multisystem and multifocal single-system LCH, given for 12 months per Histiocyte Society LCH-III/LCH-IV protocols. Recurrence rates remain 30-50% in multisystem disease.
Show evidence (1 reference)
PMID:29754886 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"For multifocal single-system or multisystem disease, systemic treatment with steroids and vinblastine for 12 months is the standard first-line regimen."
Consensus review establishing vinblastine plus systemic steroids as the first-line regimen for multifocal single-system or multisystem LCH, given for a 12-month course.
BRAF inhibitor therapy
Action: BRAF inhibitor therapy Ontology label: Pharmacotherapy NCIT:C15986
Agent: vemurafenib dabrafenib
BRAF inhibitors (vemurafenib, dabrafenib) produce rapid and dramatic responses in BRAF V600E-positive refractory LCH, including risk-organ disease, but most patients reactivate after MAPKi discontinuation, indicating MAPK inhibition suppresses rather than eradicates the mutant myeloid clone.
Mechanism Target:
INHIBITS MAPK/ERK Pathway Activation
Show evidence (2 references)
PMID:41678955 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"Short-term responses (<8 weeks) ranged from 98% (R-RO+ and R-RO-), to 30% (lung) to none (ND, DI and SC)"
International observational study of 288 children with refractory LCH treated with MAPK inhibitors (primarily vemurafenib and dabrafenib) showing rapid 98% response in risk-organ-positive and risk-organ-negative refractory disease, with lower responses in pulmonary and CNS disease.
PMID:41678955 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"After 113 patients with R-LCH discontinued MAPKi, 69 experienced disease reactivation."
Same observational cohort showing that 61% of children who discontinued MAPK inhibitor therapy experienced disease reactivation, consistent with MAPKi suppressing rather than eradicating the mutant myeloid clone.
MEK inhibitor therapy
Action: MEK inhibitor therapy Ontology label: Pharmacotherapy NCIT:C15986
Agent: cobimetinib trametinib
MEK inhibitors (cobimetinib, trametinib) are used in non-V600E MAPK-mutant LCH and in combination strategies. Cobimetinib received FDA breakthrough designation for histiocytic disorders.
Mechanism Target:
INHIBITS MAPK/ERK Pathway Activation
Cladribine and cytarabine
Action: chemotherapy MAXO:0000647
Agent: cladribine cytarabine
Salvage chemotherapy regimens used for refractory disease. Cladribine is particularly active in adult pulmonary LCH and has demonstrated sustained lung function improvement.
Show evidence (1 reference)
PMID:41611252 SUPPORT Human Clinical
"The cumulative incidence of response to treatment at 6 months was 70% (CI, 28.4-90.4)."
Phase II prospective trial of cladribine in 10 symptomatic adult PLCH patients demonstrating 70% cumulative incidence of pulmonary function response at 6 months, with sustained response in half at one year and no detected secondary malignancies through 48 months follow-up.
Smoking cessation
Action: smoking cessation agent therapy MAXO:0001004
Cornerstone of management for pulmonary LCH; many adult patients with isolated pulmonary disease stabilize or improve with cessation alone.
{ }

Source YAML

click to show
name: Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis
creation_date: "2026-05-14T16:00:00Z"
updated_date: "2026-05-14T16:00:00Z"
category: Complex
disease_term:
  preferred_term: Langerhans cell histiocytosis
  term:
    id: MONDO:0018310
    label: Langerhans cell histiocytosis
parents:
- Histiocytosis
description: >-
  Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) is a rare clonal neoplastic disorder
  characterized by accumulation of CD1a+/CD207(Langerin)+ histiocytes
  resembling epidermal Langerhans cells in one or more organs. Now classified
  as a myeloid/dendritic-cell neoplasm, LCH is driven by activating somatic
  mutations of the MAPK/ERK signaling pathway, most commonly BRAF V600E
  (about 50-60% of cases) and MAP2K1 (about 25%), with additional MAPK
  pathway mutations (NRAS, ARAF, MAP3K1) in many remaining cases. Clinical
  presentation ranges from a single self-limited bone lesion to multisystem
  disease with risk-organ (liver, spleen, hematopoietic) involvement, isolated
  pulmonary disease in adults (typically smoking-associated), and late CNS
  neurodegeneration (LCH-associated neurodegeneration, LCH-ND).

has_subtypes:
- name: SS-unifocal
  display_name: Single-system, unifocal LCH
  description: >-
    Solitary lesion involving a single organ system, most often bone
    (historically "eosinophilic granuloma"). Usually has an excellent
    prognosis and may regress spontaneously or after curettage.
- name: SS-multifocal
  display_name: Single-system, multifocal LCH
  description: >-
    Multiple lesions confined to a single organ system, typically multifocal
    bone disease. Intermediate clinical behavior between unifocal and
    multisystem disease.
- name: MS-RO-negative
  display_name: Multisystem LCH without risk-organ involvement
  description: >-
    Multisystem disease without involvement of liver, spleen, or
    hematopoietic system. Generally favorable prognosis with appropriate
    systemic therapy.
- name: MS-RO-positive
  display_name: Multisystem LCH with risk-organ involvement
  description: >-
    Multisystem disease involving one or more risk organs (liver, spleen,
    hematopoietic system). Historically labeled "Letterer-Siwe disease".
    Associated with the highest mortality and requires intensive systemic
    therapy.
- name: Pulmonary LCH
  display_name: Isolated pulmonary LCH
  description: >-
    Adult-predominant form strongly associated with cigarette smoking,
    characterized by upper-lobe nodules progressing to cystic lung disease.
    Pulmonary LCH is frequently polyclonal/reactive but can also harbor
    BRAF V600E and behave as a clonal neoplasm.
- name: LCH-ND
  display_name: LCH-associated neurodegeneration
  description: >-
    Progressive cerebellar and brainstem neurodegeneration occurring in a
    subset of patients, often years after initial diagnosis. Associated with
    circulating BRAF V600E-mutant myeloid precursors infiltrating the CNS.

pathophysiology:
- name: MAPK/ERK Pathway Activation
  description: >-
    Constitutive activation of the MAPK/ERK signaling pathway in
    CD1a+/CD207+ myeloid precursors drives clonal proliferation and
    differentiation arrest. BRAF V600E is the most common single driver,
    followed by MAP2K1 (MEK1) in-frame deletions and point mutations,
    with NRAS, KRAS, ARAF, and MAP3K1 mutations accounting for most
    remaining cases. Together these mutations occur in essentially all
    LCH lesions, establishing LCH as a clonal MAPK-pathway myeloid neoplasm.
  cell_types:
  - preferred_term: Langerhans cell
    term:
      id: CL:0000453
      label: Langerhans cell
  biological_processes:
  - preferred_term: MAPK cascade
    term:
      id: GO:0000165
      label: MAPK cascade
    modifier: INCREASED
  - preferred_term: ERK1 and ERK2 cascade
    term:
      id: GO:0070371
      label: ERK1 and ERK2 cascade
    modifier: INCREASED
  evidence:
  - reference: PMID:33935037
    reference_title: "Recent advances in the understanding of the molecular pathogenesis and targeted therapy options in Langerhans cell histiocytosis."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "Activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway is a key molecular mechanism involved in the development of LCH."
    explanation: >-
      Review establishing constitutive MAPK pathway activation as the central
      molecular mechanism driving LCH pathogenesis.
  - reference: PMID:36083130
    reference_title: "Clinicogenomic associations in childhood Langerhans cell histiocytosis: an international cohort study."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "MAPK pathway gene alterations were detected in 300 (79.6%) patients, including 191 (50.7%) with BRAFV600E, 54 with MAP2K1 mutations, 39 with BRAF exon 12 mutations, 13 with rare BRAF alterations, and 3 with ARAF or KRAS mutations."
    explanation: >-
      Large international cohort of 377 children quantifying the MAPK pathway
      mutation spectrum and confirming MAPK alterations are present in nearly
      80% of childhood LCH lesions.
  - reference: PMID:25430560
    reference_title: "Progress in understanding the pathogenesis of Langerhans cell histiocytosis: back to Histiocytosis X?"
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "LCH occurs as a consequence of a misguided differentiation programme of myeloid dendritic cell precursors."
    explanation: >-
      Conceptual framework establishing LCH as a misguided myeloid
      differentiation disorder, with ERK pathway activation at specific
      myeloid differentiation stages defining clinical extent.
  downstream:
  - target: Clonal histiocyte accumulation and tissue infiltration

- name: Clonal histiocyte accumulation and tissue infiltration
  description: >-
    MAPK-activated precursors expand and accumulate in target tissues
    (bone, skin, lung, pituitary, liver, spleen, bone marrow, CNS), where
    they recruit secondary inflammatory cells and produce a characteristic
    granulomatous lesion. Lesional cells exhibit Langerhans-cell phenotype
    (CD1a+, CD207+/Langerin+, S100+) and contain Birbeck granules.
  cell_types:
  - preferred_term: Langerhans cell
    term:
      id: CL:0000453
      label: Langerhans cell
  biological_processes:
  - preferred_term: cell population proliferation
    term:
      id: GO:0008283
      label: cell population proliferation
    modifier: INCREASED
  evidence:
  - reference: PMID:32750121
    reference_title: "Bone marrow-derived myeloid progenitors as driver mutation carriers in high- and low-risk Langerhans cell histiocytosis."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: IN_VITRO
    snippet: "CD34+c-Kit+Flt3+ cells from BM of MS-RO+ LCH patients produced Langerhans cell (LC)-like cells in vitro. Both LC-like and DC offspring from this progenitor carried the BRAF mutation, confirming their common origin."
    explanation: >-
      Functional demonstration that bone marrow CD34+c-Kit+Flt3+ myeloid
      progenitors carry the driver mutation and give rise to lesional
      LC-like cells, establishing the myeloid precursor origin of LCH cells.
  downstream:
  - target: T cell exhaustion and immune checkpoint evasion

- name: T cell exhaustion and immune checkpoint evasion
  description: >-
    MAPK-hyperactivated lesional dendritic cells recruit T lymphocytes into
    LCH granulomas, where both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells develop an exhausted
    phenotype with high expression of immune checkpoint receptors (e.g.,
    PD-1), while LCH dendritic cells upregulate matching checkpoint
    ligands. Intralesional CD8+ T cells show blunted cytokine production
    and impaired effector function, providing a rationale for combined
    MAPK + immune-checkpoint inhibition.
  cell_types:
  - preferred_term: CD8-positive, alpha-beta T cell
    term:
      id: CL:0000625
      label: CD8-positive, alpha-beta T cell
  biological_processes:
  - preferred_term: Exhausted T cell differentiation
    term:
      id: GO:0160083
      label: exhausted T cell differentiation
    modifier: INCREASED
  evidence:
  - reference: PMID:33075814
    reference_title: "Overcoming T-cell exhaustion in LCH: PD-1 blockade and targeted MAPK inhibition are synergistic in a mouse model of LCH."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "Both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells exhibited \"exhausted\" phenotypes with high expression of the immune checkpoint receptors. LCH DCs showed robust expression of ligands to checkpoint receptors."
    explanation: >-
      Direct phenotypic analysis of T cells in human LCH lesions documenting
      checkpoint-receptor-driven T cell exhaustion as a central immune-evasion
      mechanism in LCH.

phenotypes:
- category: Skeletal
  name: Lytic bone lesion
  description: >-
    Punched-out lytic lesions, most commonly in skull, ribs, vertebrae,
    pelvis, and long bones. Often the first and only manifestation in
    single-system unifocal disease.
  phenotype_term:
    preferred_term: Lytic bone lesion
    term:
      id: HP:0002797
      label: Osteolysis
- category: Endocrine
  name: Central diabetes insipidus
  description: >-
    Diabetes insipidus from posterior pituitary/hypothalamic infiltration,
    occurring in 11-24% of patients overall and the most frequent
    endocrinological manifestation of LCH.
  phenotype_term:
    preferred_term: Central diabetes insipidus
    term:
      id: HP:0000863
      label: Central diabetes insipidus
  evidence:
  - reference: PMID:34167121
    reference_title: "Paediatric Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis Disease: Long-Term Sequelae in the Hypothalamic Endocrine System."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "The most common central nervous system (CNS) manifestation in LCH is the infiltration of the hypothalamic-pituitary region leading to destruction and neurodegeneration of CNS tissue. The latter causes the most frequent endocrinological manifestation, that is, central diabetes insipidus (CDI), and less often anterior pituitary hormone deficiency (APD). The reported incidence of CDI is estimated between 11.5 and 24%"
    explanation: >-
      Establishes central diabetes insipidus as the most frequent endocrine
      manifestation of LCH, with reported incidence 11.5-24%, caused by
      LCH infiltration of the hypothalamic-pituitary region.
- category: Dermatologic
  name: Seborrheic-like skin rash
  description: >-
    Erythematous, scaling, and crusting papules and plaques resembling
    seborrheic dermatitis, classically affecting the scalp, intertriginous
    areas, and trunk in infants with multisystem disease.
  phenotype_term:
    preferred_term: Seborrheic-like skin rash
    term:
      id: HP:0000988
      label: Skin rash
- category: Hepatobiliary
  name: Hepatomegaly
  description: >-
    Liver enlargement reflecting risk-organ involvement; advanced disease
    may progress to sclerosing cholangitis and liver failure.
  phenotype_term:
    preferred_term: Hepatomegaly
    term:
      id: HP:0002240
      label: Hepatomegaly
- category: Hepatobiliary
  name: Sclerosing cholangitis
  description: >-
    Progressive cholestatic liver disease that may follow biliary tract
    LCH infiltration and persists or progresses after histiocytes have
    been cleared. End-stage disease may require liver transplant.
  phenotype_term:
    preferred_term: Sclerosing cholangitis
    term:
      id: HP:0030991
      label: Sclerosing cholangitis
- category: Hematologic
  name: Splenomegaly
  description: >-
    Spleen enlargement reflecting risk-organ involvement; associated with
    increased mortality in multisystem disease.
  phenotype_term:
    preferred_term: Splenomegaly
    term:
      id: HP:0001744
      label: Splenomegaly
- category: Hematologic
  name: Cytopenias
  description: >-
    Anemia, thrombocytopenia, and/or neutropenia from hematopoietic
    risk-organ involvement; a marker of high-risk multisystem disease.
  phenotype_term:
    preferred_term: Pancytopenia
    term:
      id: HP:0001876
      label: Pancytopenia
- category: Respiratory
  name: Pulmonary cysts
  description: >-
    Characteristic upper- and mid-lobe-predominant nodules progressing to
    bizarre-shaped cysts on HRCT; hallmark of pulmonary LCH in adult
    smokers (~96% of PLCH patients have a smoking history).
  phenotype_term:
    preferred_term: Pulmonary cyst
    term:
      id: HP:0032445
      label: Pulmonary cyst
  evidence:
  - reference: PMID:24482091
    reference_title: "Pulmonary Langerhans cell histiocytosis (PLCH): a new UK register."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "96% current or ex-smokers."
    explanation: >-
      UK PLCH registry of 67 cases documenting that 96% of pulmonary LCH
      patients are current or former cigarette smokers, establishing the
      strong smoking association of adult pulmonary LCH.
- category: Neurologic
  name: Cerebellar neurodegeneration
  description: >-
    Progressive cerebellar dysfunction (ataxia, dysarthria) and behavioral
    or cognitive decline, characteristic of LCH-associated
    neurodegeneration (LCH-ND).
  phenotype_term:
    preferred_term: Cerebellar atrophy
    term:
      id: HP:0001272
      label: Cerebellar atrophy

genetic:
- name: BRAF V600E
  notes: >-
    Activating BRAF V600E mutation, present in approximately 50% of
    pediatric LCH lesions and ~30% of adult LCH. Establishes LCH as a
    clonal MAPK-driven myeloid neoplasm and predicts response to BRAF
    inhibitor therapy.
  gene_term:
    preferred_term: BRAF
    term:
      id: hgnc:1097
      label: BRAF
  variant_origin: SOMATIC
  relationship_type: SOMATIC_DRIVER
  evidence:
  - reference: PMID:38749502
    reference_title: "Genetic Landscape and Its Prognostic Impact in Children With Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "A total of 30 genomic alterations in 5 genes of the MAPK pathway were identified in 187 of 223 patients (83.9%). BRAF V600E (B-Raf proto-oncogene, serine/threonine kinase) was the most common mutation (51.6%)"
    explanation: >-
      Pediatric cohort of 223 LCH patients establishing BRAF V600E as the
      single most common driver, present in 51.6% of cases.
  - reference: PMID:39513946
    reference_title: "BRAF Deletion in Adult Patients with Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis Correlates with Multisystem Disease and Poor Outcomes."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "MAPK/PI3K pathway alterations were observed in 77.6% (n = 197) of the patients. BRAFV600E mutation was the most common (30.7%, n = 78), followed by BRAFindel (18.1%, n = 46) and MAP2K1 mutations (12.6%, n = 32)."
    explanation: >-
      Adult cohort of 254 LCH patients showing BRAF V600E remains the most
      common driver in adults (30.7%) but at lower frequency than in pediatric
      disease, with BRAFindel as a frequent alternative MAPK lesion in adults.
- name: MAP2K1
  notes: >-
    Activating MAP2K1 (MEK1) mutations, including in-frame deletions and
    point mutations, present in approximately 13-17% of LCH cases. Mutually
    exclusive with BRAF V600E in most cases.
  gene_term:
    preferred_term: MAP2K1
    term:
      id: hgnc:6840
      label: MAP2K1
  variant_origin: SOMATIC
  relationship_type: SOMATIC_DRIVER
  evidence:
  - reference: PMID:38749502
    reference_title: "Genetic Landscape and Its Prognostic Impact in Children With Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "BRAF V600E (B-Raf proto-oncogene, serine/threonine kinase) was the most common mutation (51.6%), followed by MAP2K1 (mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 1) alterations (17.0%)"
    explanation: >-
      Pediatric cohort showing MAP2K1 as the second most common driver after
      BRAF V600E, present in 17.0% of cases.
- name: ARAF
  notes: >-
    Activating ARAF mutations are an additional, rarer MAPK-pathway driver
    in LCH (about 2% of pediatric cases).
  gene_term:
    preferred_term: ARAF
    term:
      id: hgnc:646
      label: ARAF
  variant_origin: SOMATIC
  relationship_type: SOMATIC_DRIVER
  evidence:
  - reference: PMID:38749502
    reference_title: "Genetic Landscape and Its Prognostic Impact in Children With Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "ARAF (A-Raf proto-oncogene, serine/threonine kinase) and KRAS (KRAS proto-oncogene, GTPase) mutations were relatively rare (2.2% and 0.9%, respectively)."
    explanation: >-
      Pediatric cohort quantifying ARAF as a rare alternative MAPK pathway
      driver in LCH (~2% of cases).

treatments:
- name: Vinblastine and Prednisone
  description: >-
    Standard frontline systemic therapy for multisystem and multifocal
    single-system LCH, given for 12 months per Histiocyte Society
    LCH-III/LCH-IV protocols. Recurrence rates remain 30-50% in
    multisystem disease.
  treatment_term:
    preferred_term: chemotherapy
    term:
      id: MAXO:0000647
      label: chemotherapy
    therapeutic_agent:
    - preferred_term: vinblastine
      term:
        id: CHEBI:27375
        label: vincaleukoblastine
    - preferred_term: prednisone
      term:
        id: CHEBI:8382
        label: prednisone
  evidence:
  - reference: PMID:29754886
    reference_title: "Langerhans cell histiocytosis in children: Diagnosis, differential diagnosis, treatment, sequelae, and standardized follow-up."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "For multifocal single-system or multisystem disease, systemic treatment with steroids and vinblastine for 12 months is the standard first-line regimen."
    explanation: >-
      Consensus review establishing vinblastine plus systemic steroids as
      the first-line regimen for multifocal single-system or multisystem
      LCH, given for a 12-month course.
- name: BRAF inhibitor therapy
  description: >-
    BRAF inhibitors (vemurafenib, dabrafenib) produce rapid and dramatic
    responses in BRAF V600E-positive refractory LCH, including risk-organ
    disease, but most patients reactivate after MAPKi discontinuation,
    indicating MAPK inhibition suppresses rather than eradicates the
    mutant myeloid clone.
  treatment_term:
    preferred_term: BRAF inhibitor therapy
    term:
      id: NCIT:C15986
      label: Pharmacotherapy
    therapeutic_agent:
    - preferred_term: vemurafenib
      term:
        id: CHEBI:63637
        label: vemurafenib
    - preferred_term: dabrafenib
      term:
        id: CHEBI:75045
        label: dabrafenib
  target_mechanisms:
  - target: MAPK/ERK Pathway Activation
    treatment_effect: INHIBITS
  evidence:
  - reference: PMID:41678955
    reference_title: "Long-term MAPK inhibition of childhood refractory-Langerhans cell histiocytosis: an observational study on 288 patients."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "Short-term responses (<8 weeks) ranged from 98% (R-RO+ and R-RO-), to 30% (lung) to none (ND, DI and SC)"
    explanation: >-
      International observational study of 288 children with refractory LCH
      treated with MAPK inhibitors (primarily vemurafenib and dabrafenib)
      showing rapid 98% response in risk-organ-positive and risk-organ-negative
      refractory disease, with lower responses in pulmonary and CNS disease.
  - reference: PMID:41678955
    reference_title: "Long-term MAPK inhibition of childhood refractory-Langerhans cell histiocytosis: an observational study on 288 patients."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "After 113 patients with R-LCH discontinued MAPKi, 69 experienced disease reactivation."
    explanation: >-
      Same observational cohort showing that 61% of children who discontinued
      MAPK inhibitor therapy experienced disease reactivation, consistent with
      MAPKi suppressing rather than eradicating the mutant myeloid clone.
- name: MEK inhibitor therapy
  description: >-
    MEK inhibitors (cobimetinib, trametinib) are used in non-V600E
    MAPK-mutant LCH and in combination strategies. Cobimetinib received
    FDA breakthrough designation for histiocytic disorders.
  treatment_term:
    preferred_term: MEK inhibitor therapy
    term:
      id: NCIT:C15986
      label: Pharmacotherapy
    therapeutic_agent:
    - preferred_term: cobimetinib
      term:
        id: CHEBI:90851
        label: cobimetinib
    - preferred_term: trametinib
      term:
        id: CHEBI:75998
        label: trametinib
  target_mechanisms:
  - target: MAPK/ERK Pathway Activation
    treatment_effect: INHIBITS
- name: Cladribine and cytarabine
  description: >-
    Salvage chemotherapy regimens used for refractory disease. Cladribine
    is particularly active in adult pulmonary LCH and has demonstrated
    sustained lung function improvement.
  treatment_term:
    preferred_term: chemotherapy
    term:
      id: MAXO:0000647
      label: chemotherapy
    therapeutic_agent:
    - preferred_term: cladribine
      term:
        id: CHEBI:567361
        label: cladribine
    - preferred_term: cytarabine
      term:
        id: CHEBI:28680
        label: cytarabine
  evidence:
  - reference: PMID:41611252
    reference_title: "Efficacy and safety of cladribine in adult pulmonary langerhans cell histiocytosis: a phase II study."
    supports: SUPPORT
    evidence_source: HUMAN_CLINICAL
    snippet: "The cumulative incidence of response to treatment at 6 months was 70% (CI, 28.4-90.4)."
    explanation: >-
      Phase II prospective trial of cladribine in 10 symptomatic adult PLCH
      patients demonstrating 70% cumulative incidence of pulmonary function
      response at 6 months, with sustained response in half at one year and
      no detected secondary malignancies through 48 months follow-up.
- name: Smoking cessation
  description: >-
    Cornerstone of management for pulmonary LCH; many adult patients with
    isolated pulmonary disease stabilize or improve with cessation alone.
  treatment_term:
    preferred_term: smoking cessation agent therapy
    term:
      id: MAXO:0001004
      label: smoking cessation agent therapy

notes: >-
  Curation informed by OpenScientist deep research report
  (research/Langerhans_Cell_Histiocytosis-deep-research-openscientist.md,
  52 PMID citations). Evidence items are anchored to exact-quote snippets
  from cached PubMed abstracts.
📚

References & Deep Research

Deep Research

1
OpenScientist
1. Disease Information
openscientist-autonomous 52 citations 2026-05-14T10:41:29.929114

1. Disease Information

Overview

Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH) is a rare neoplastic disorder of the mononuclear phagocyte system, characterized by the accumulation and infiltration of pathological CD1a+/CD207+ (langerin-positive) myeloid-derived dendritic cells into various tissues and organs, leading to granulomatous inflammation and tissue destruction. LCH is classified under the "L-group" (Langerhans-related) histiocytoses in the revised 2016 classification by the Histiocyte Society and was recognized in the WHO 2022 Classification of Tumors of Hematopoietic and Lymphoid Tissues as a distinct entity (PMID: 37814848).

Key Identifiers

Database Identifier
MONDO MONDO:0011906
OMIM 604856
Orphanet ORPHA:389
ICD-10 C96.6 (Unifocal LCH), D76.0 (LCH, NEC)
ICD-11 2B35.0
MeSH D006646

Synonyms and Alternative Names

  • Histiocytosis X (historical)
  • Eosinophilic granuloma (unifocal bone disease)
  • Hand-Schüller-Christian disease (multifocal bone with diabetes insipidus and exophthalmos)
  • Letterer-Siwe disease (disseminated, acute form)
  • Hashimoto-Pritzker disease (congenital self-healing form)
  • Langerhans cell granulomatosis
  • Pulmonary Langerhans cell histiocytosis (PLCH; lung-specific adult form)

Information Source Type

Information is derived primarily from aggregated disease-level resources including international registries, multi-center clinical trials, molecular profiling studies, and systematic reviews, supplemented by individual patient case series and reports.


2. Etiology

Disease Causal Factors

LCH is fundamentally a clonal neoplastic disorder driven by somatic activating mutations in the MAPK signaling pathway. The landmark discovery of the BRAF V600E mutation in LCH lesions established its neoplastic nature. An international clinicogenomic study of 377 children found MAPK pathway gene alterations in 300 (79.6%) patients, including 191 (50.7%) with BRAF V600E, 54 with MAP2K1 mutations, 39 with BRAF exon 12 mutations, 13 with rare BRAF alterations, and 3 with ARAF or KRAS mutations (PMID: 36083130). In adults, "MAPK/PI3K pathway alterations were observed in 77.6% (n = 197) of the patients. BRAFV600E mutation was the most common (30.7%, n = 78), followed by BRAFindel (18.1%, n = 46) and MAP2K1 mutations (12.6%, n = 32)" (PMID: 39513946). A pediatric cohort confirmed: "A total of 30 genomic alterations in 5 genes of the MAPK pathway were identified in 187 of 223 patients (83.9%). BRAF V600E... was the most common mutation (51.6%), followed by MAP2K1... alterations (17.0%) and other BRAF mutations (13.0%)" (PMID: 38749502).

Genetic Risk Factors

  • BRAF V600E (somatic): Most common driver mutation (~50% of cases); gain-of-function missense mutation constitutively activating the RAS-RAF-MEK-ERK cascade
  • MAP2K1 mutations (somatic): Second most common (~15%); various missense and in-frame deletion mutations; often mutually exclusive with BRAF V600E
  • BRAF exon 12 in-frame deletions/indels (somatic): ~10–18% of cases; in adults, BRAF deletions correlate with multisystem disease and poorer outcomes (PMID: 39513946)
  • ARAF mutations (somatic): Extremely rare; a novel hotspot somatic mutation c.1046_1051delAGGCTT (p.Q349_F351delinsL) was identified in 4/148 pediatric patients; "this mutation could trigger the MAPKinase pathway and phosphorylate its downstream effectors MEK1/2 and ERK1/2 (relatively weaker than BRAFV600E)" (PMID: 37572153)
  • KRAS, NRAS mutations (somatic): Rare; reported in pulmonary LCH and some pediatric cases

Environmental Risk Factors

  • Cigarette smoking: The dominant environmental risk factor, particularly for pulmonary LCH (PLCH) in adults. In a UK cohort, 96% of PLCH patients were current or ex-smokers (PMID: 24482091). "Pulmonary Langerhans cell histiocytosis (PLCH) is a rare cystic lung disease that affects young adults with exposure to cigarette smoke" (PMID: 41110924).
  • Assisted reproductive technology (ART): A nationwide cohort study (n=108,776) found ART-conceived children had SIR 4.02 (95% CI 1.08–10.29) for LCH; ICSI-conceived children SIR 5.41 (95% CI 1.11–15.80), suggesting potential epigenetic contributions (PMID: 39383799).
  • Age: Peak incidence in children aged 1–3 years; second peak in young adults (20–40 years) for PLCH
  • Sex: Slight male predominance (male:female ratio ~1.2–2.3:1)

Gene-Environment Interactions

A critical gene-environment interaction has been demonstrated in PLCH using a cigarette smoke (CS)-exposed BRAF V600E-mutant mouse model that "recapitulates many hallmark characteristics of PLCH." Specifically, "CD11c-targeted expression of BRAF-V600E increases DC responsiveness to stimuli, including the chemokine CCL20" (PMID: 31961828). Smoking promotes recruitment of MAPK-activated circulating myeloid precursors to the lung via CCL20 and CCL7, establishing a synergistic mechanism between somatic MAPK mutations and tobacco exposure.

Protective Factors

No well-established genetic or environmental protective factors have been identified for LCH. Smoking cessation is the most important modifiable intervention for PLCH.


3. Phenotypes

LCH presents with a remarkably diverse phenotypic spectrum depending on the organ systems involved.

Skeletal Phenotypes (Most Common)

Phenotype HPO Term Frequency Onset Severity
Osteolytic bone lesions HP:0002797 (Osteolysis) ~50–80% of children Childhood Variable
Skull bone defects HP:0002684 (Abnormality of the calvaria) ~40–50% Childhood Moderate
Vertebral fractures HP:0002953 (Vertebral compression fracture) ~10–15% Variable Moderate-severe
Mastoid involvement HP:0011450 (Mastoiditis) ~15–25% Childhood Moderate

Endocrine Phenotypes

Phenotype HPO Term Frequency Onset Severity
Central diabetes insipidus HP:0000873 (Diabetes insipidus) 11.5–24% Variable Severe, permanent
Anterior pituitary deficiency HP:0040075 (Hypopituitarism) ~5–15% Post-DI onset Severe, progressive
Growth hormone deficiency HP:0000824 (Decreased response to GH) ~5–10% Childhood Moderate

"The most common central nervous system (CNS) manifestation in LCH is the infiltration of the hypothalamic-pituitary region leading to destruction and neurodegeneration of CNS tissue. The latter causes the most frequent endocrinological manifestation, that is, central diabetes insipidus (CDI), and less often anterior pituitary hormone deficiency (APD). The reported incidence of CDI is estimated between 11.5 and 24%" (PMID: 34167121).

Cutaneous Phenotypes

Phenotype HPO Term Frequency Onset
Seborrheic dermatitis-like rash HP:0001051 ~30–50% in infants Neonatal-infancy
Papulonodular skin lesions HP:0200034 ~30% Variable
Scalp lesions HP:0007536 ~20% Childhood

Pulmonary Phenotypes

Phenotype HPO Term Frequency Onset
Pulmonary cysts HP:0006532 ~10% children; common adults Adult
Spontaneous pneumothorax HP:0002107 ~10% of pulmonary LCH Variable
Restrictive/obstructive lung disease HP:0002091 Common in PLCH Adult

Neurological Phenotypes

Phenotype HPO Term Frequency Onset
CNS neurodegeneration HP:0002180 9–45% long-term Late, progressive
Cerebellar ataxia HP:0001251 ~5–10% Late
Cognitive impairment HP:0100543 ~20–30% survivors Late

Long-term follow-up revealed that 9 of 25 patients had permanent CNS consequences and "psychological testing revealed subtle deficits in short-term auditory memory (STAM) in 14 patients" (PMID: 16470521).

Other Phenotypes

Hepatomegaly (HP:0002240, ~15% MS-LCH), splenomegaly (HP:0001744, ~10% MS-LCH), lymphadenopathy (HP:0002716, ~10–15%), sclerosing cholangitis (HP:0030991, ~5% MS-LCH), otitis media/hearing loss (HP:0000388, ~15–25%), anemia/cytopenias (HP:0001903, ~10–20% MS-LCH).

Quality of Life Impact

A study of 120 Chinese children with LCH found that 21.7% exhibited behavioral and emotional problems (PMID: 41761152). Permanent consequences including DI requiring lifelong desmopressin, growth failure, and neurocognitive deficits significantly impact quality of life. "Psychoneuroendocrine sequelae were found in an unexpectedly high number of patients" (PMID: 16470521).


4. Genetic/Molecular Information

Causal Genes and Pathogenic Variants

{{figure:lch_mutation_survival_overview.png|caption=MAPK pathway mutation spectrum in LCH showing relative frequencies of BRAF V600E, MAP2K1, BRAF indels, and other mutations, alongside survival curves stratified by disease extent}}

Gene HGNC ID Variant Type Frequency Origin Functional Consequence
BRAF HGNC:1097 Missense (V600E) 30.7–51.6% Somatic Gain-of-function; constitutive kinase activation
BRAF HGNC:1097 In-frame deletion (exon 12) 10–18.1% Somatic Gain-of-function; RAF dimerization-independent activation
MAP2K1 HGNC:6840 Missense/in-frame deletion 12.6–17.0% Somatic Gain-of-function; constitutive MEK activation
ARAF HGNC:646 In-frame deletion <3% Somatic Gain-of-function; MEK/ERK phosphorylation
KRAS HGNC:6407 Missense <2% Somatic Gain-of-function; RAS hyperactivation
NRAS HGNC:7989 Missense <1% Somatic Gain-of-function

Somatic vs. Germline Origin: All known LCH driver mutations are somatic in origin. There is no established germline predisposition. Bone marrow CD34+c-Kit+Flt3+ myeloid progenitors carry BRAF mutations in both high- and low-risk LCH. "Both LC-like and DC offspring from this progenitor carried the BRAF mutation, confirming their common origin" (PMID: 32750121).

Variant Classification: BRAF V600E in the context of LCH is classified as pathogenic per ACMG/AMP guidelines and is cataloged in COSMIC as one of the most recurrent somatic mutations across human cancers.

Population Allele Frequency: BRAF V600E (rs113488022) is extremely rare in germline population databases (gnomAD allele frequency ~0.000004), consistent with its somatic origin in LCH.

Modifier Genes

No well-established genetic modifier genes have been identified. However, RAF-independent MEK mutations (constitutively activating MEK independently of RAF) predict resistance to MEK inhibitors and are associated with "worse progression-free survival with MEK1/2 inhibition as compared to patients with other MEK1/2 mutational classes" (PMID: 41135521).

Epigenetic Information

The association between ART/ICSI and LCH risk (SIR 4.02–5.41) suggests epigenetic mechanisms may contribute to disease susceptibility (PMID: 39383799). Cyclin D1, a downstream target of the MAPK pathway, has been proposed as a neoplastic marker in LCH (PMID: 34797805). No large-scale epigenomic profiling studies of LCH lesions have been published—this represents a significant knowledge gap.

Chromosomal Abnormalities

LCH is not characterized by large-scale chromosomal abnormalities. The driving genetic events are point mutations and small in-frame deletions in MAPK pathway genes.


5. Environmental Information

Environmental Factors

  • Cigarette smoke: The primary environmental factor, particularly for adult PLCH. "Cigarette smoking is a recognized causative agent or precipitant of specific diffuse lung diseases" including PLCH (PMID: 23001806). PLCH is classified as a smoking-related interstitial lung disease, accounting for 3–5% of all ILD (PMID: 39423337).

Lifestyle Factors

  • Smoking cessation: Essential intervention for PLCH management. No other lifestyle factors have been conclusively linked.

Infectious Agents

No confirmed infectious agent has been identified. Historical associations with viruses were investigated but not confirmed. A study searching for retroviral determinants in LCH xenografts found "no type D retroviruses" (PMID: 26347284).


6. Mechanism / Pathophysiology

Molecular Pathways

The central pathogenic mechanism is constitutive activation of the RAS-RAF-MEK-ERK (MAPK) signaling cascade (KEGG: hsa04010). "Activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway is a key molecular mechanism involved in the development of LCH" (PMID: 33935037). Additional pathways include PI3K-AKT (KEGG: hsa04151), NF-κB (KEGG: hsa04064), and JAK-STAT (KEGG: hsa04630).

Pathway Identifier Role in LCH
MAPK signaling KEGG:hsa04010 Core oncogenic driver
PI3K-AKT signaling KEGG:hsa04151 Co-activated in subset
NF-κB signaling KEGG:hsa04064 Inflammatory cytokine production
Osteoclast differentiation KEGG:hsa04380 Bone lesion formation
Oncogenic MAPK signaling R-HSA-6802957 Pathological ERK activation

The Misguided Myeloid Differentiation Model

The prevailing pathogenic model posits that LCH arises as "a consequence of a misguided differentiation programme of myeloid dendritic cell precursors" (PMID: 25430560). This was directly confirmed by demonstrating that bone marrow "CD34+c-Kit+Flt3+ cells from BM of MS-RO+ LCH patients produced Langerhans cell (LC)-like cells in vitro. Both LC-like and DC offspring from this progenitor carried the BRAF mutation, confirming their common origin" (PMID: 32750121).

The model was further validated using iPSC technology: "BRAFV600E/WT iPSCs display myelomonocytic skewing during hematopoiesis and spontaneously differentiate into CD1a+/CD207+ cells that are similar to lesional LCH cells and are derived from a CD14+ progenitor" (PMID: 39630039).

Causal chain:

SOMATIC MAPK MUTATION (BRAF V600E / MAP2K1 / BRAF indel / ARAF / KRAS)
↓
  Arises in hematopoietic myeloid progenitor (CD34+/c-Kit+/Flt3+)
↓
  Constitutive MAPK pathway activation → ERK1/2 phosphorylation
↓
  Myelomonocytic skewing during hematopoiesis
↓
  Aberrant differentiation into CD1a+/CD207+ pathological cells
↓
  Recruitment to tissues via chemokines (CCL20, CCL7)
↓
  GRANULOMATOUS LESION FORMATION
  (LCH cells + exhausted T cells + eosinophils + macrophages)
↓
  Cytokine storm (OPN/SPP1, IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-6)
↓
  TISSUE DESTRUCTION & ORGAN DYSFUNCTION

Immune System Involvement

LCH lesions are characterized by a complex inflammatory microenvironment with T cell exhaustion: "Both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells exhibited 'exhausted' phenotypes with high expression of the immune checkpoint receptors. LCH DCs showed robust expression of ligands to checkpoint receptors" (PMID: 33075814). Intralesional regulatory T cells demonstrate intact suppressive activity. SPP1 (osteopontin) is a key inflammatory mediator: "several novel genes whose products activate and recruit T cells to sites of inflammation, including SPP1 (osteopontin), were highly overexpressed in LCH CD207(+) cells" (PMID: 20220088).

Neurodegeneration Mechanism

A breakthrough finding identified mutant microglial clones as the driver of LCH-associated neurodegeneration: "We found microglial mutant clones in LCH and ECD patients, whether or not they presented with clinical symptoms of neurodegeneration, associated with microgliosis, astrocytosis, and neuronal loss, predominantly in the rhombencephalon gray nuclei" (PMID: 40081365). This identifies a distinct CNS-resident pathway that is independent of active systemic disease.

Molecular Profiling

Transcriptomics: Gene expression profiling identified 2,113 differentially expressed genes (FDR<0.01) in LCH CD207+ cells compared to control epidermal Langerhans cells (PMID: 20220088).

Key Biomarkers: - Osteopontin (SPP1/OPN): CSF biomarker for CNS-LCH—"Osteopontin was the only consistently elevated CSF protein in patients with CNS-LCH compared with patients with other brain pathologies" (PMID: 29624648). High serum OPN levels correlate with poorer survival in multisystem LCH with high-risk organ involvement (PMID: 28326824). - MMP-7 and TNF-α: Proposed as prognostic biomarkers for adult PLCH (PMID: 41720965). - Cell-free BRAF V600E DNA: Monitoring biomarker for treatment response (PMID: 41823178).

Key GO Terms

GO ID Term Category
GO:0000165 MAPK cascade Biological Process
GO:0006954 Inflammatory response Biological Process
GO:0030099 Myeloid cell differentiation Biological Process
GO:0030154 Cell differentiation Biological Process
GO:0045087 Innate immune response Biological Process
GO:0001774 Microglial cell activation Biological Process
GO:0004674 Protein serine/threonine kinase activity Molecular Function
GO:0004708 MAP kinase kinase activity Molecular Function
GO:0005634 Nucleus Cellular Component
GO:0005829 Cytosol Cellular Component

Cell Types Involved

CL Term Cell Type Role in LCH
CL:0000451 Langerhans cell Pathological variant (disease hallmark)
CL:0000782 Myeloid dendritic cell Precursor cell type
CL:0000037 Hematopoietic stem cell Mutation carrier in high-risk disease
CL:0000129 Microglial cell CNS neurodegeneration driver
CL:0000625 CD8+ alpha-beta T cell Exhausted phenotype in lesions
CL:0000815 Regulatory T cell Suppressive activity in lesions
CL:0000771 Eosinophil Characteristic inflammatory infiltrate
CL:0000235 Macrophage Granuloma component
CL:0000092 Osteoclast Bone resorption in lesions

7. Anatomical Structures Affected

Organ Level

Organ/System UBERON Term Involvement Type Frequency
Bone UBERON:0002481 Primary (osteolytic lesions) ~80% children
Skin UBERON:0002097 Primary ~30–50%
Lung UBERON:0002048 Primary (PLCH) / secondary ~10% children; common adults
Pituitary gland UBERON:0000007 Primary (endocrine) ~15–25%
Liver UBERON:0002107 Risk organ ~10–15% MS-LCH
Spleen UBERON:0002106 Risk organ ~5–10% MS-LCH
Bone marrow UBERON:0002371 Risk organ (hematopoietic) ~5%
Lymph nodes UBERON:0000029 Secondary ~10–15%
CNS (brain) UBERON:0000955 Secondary (neurodegeneration) ~10–45% long-term
GI tract UBERON:0001555 Rare <5%

Subcellular Level

The pathological hallmark at the subcellular level includes Birbeck granules—tennis-racket shaped organelles unique to Langerhans cells, visible on electron microscopy. "In the examined 11 cases co-expression of CD1a with langerin and with the presence of Birbeck's granules was noted" (PMID: 17378241). However, electron microscopy "is no longer required for diagnosis due to immunohistochemical staining" (PMID: 32513402).

Localization

CNS involvement predominantly affects the rhombencephalon gray nuclei (PMID: 40081365). Craniofacial bones (temporal bone, orbital rim, mandible) are the most common skeletal sites. Disease is generally bilateral/multifocal in multisystem disease; unilateral in localized forms.


8. Temporal Development

Onset

  • Pediatric LCH: Peak incidence 1–3 years; can present at birth (neonatal LCH) (PMID: 41462262)
  • Adult PLCH: Young to middle-aged adults (median age ~37–38 years)
  • Onset pattern: Variable—acute (neonatal disseminated), subacute (most cases), insidious (PLCH, pituitary involvement)—one case showed a "10-year diagnostic odyssey" (PMID: 41189157)

Progression

  • Single-system LCH: Often self-limited; "Isolated cutaneous disease should only be treated when symptomatic, because spontaneous resolution is common" (PMID: 29754886)
  • Multisystem LCH: Relapsing-remitting; reactivation rate 30–50%. "MS-LCH patients had a higher reactivation rate compared to those with SS-LCH (50.0% vs. 4.3%, p = 0.02)" (PMID: 41546712)
  • Neurodegeneration: Progressive and irreversible; "deterioration of radiological ND was noted in 17 patients leading to overt clinical neuropsychological impairment in five" (PMID: 22183971)

Critical Periods

First 2 years after diagnosis carry the highest reactivation risk. Age <1 year is an independent risk factor for inferior survival (HR 13.79, 95% CI: 1.5–123.4, p=0.02) (PMID: 41546712).


9. Inheritance and Population

Epidemiology

Parameter Value Source
Incidence (children 0–14y) 4.46 per million/year PMID: 36122574
Incidence (adults ≥15y) 1.06 per million/year PMID: 36122574
Prevalence 9.95 per million overall PMID: 36122574
1-year OS (children) 99% PMID: 36122574
1-year OS (adults) 90% PMID: 36122574
Sex ratio (M:F) ~1.2–2.3:1 (male predominance) Multiple series

These data are derived from the England national registry (2003–2018), n=1,340 patients (856 children, 484 adults), representing the most comprehensive population-level epidemiological data available.

Genetic Etiology

LCH is not inherited. All known driver mutations are somatic. There is no Mendelian inheritance pattern, no germline predisposition gene, no founder effects, and no role for consanguinity. Possible ethnic variation exists: lower BRAF V600E frequency in Asian populations (~21% in Japanese vs ~50% in Western series) (PMID: 27041734), implying "the possibility of different genetic backgrounds in the pathogenesis of LCH across various ethnicities."

Population Demographics

Age distribution is bimodal—pediatric peak at 1–3 years and adult peak at 30–40 years (particularly PLCH). Geographic distribution is worldwide with no clear endemic pattern. Age ≥60 years carries HR 22.12 for mortality (PMID: 36122574).


10. Diagnostics

Clinical Tests

Biopsy and Histopathology (Gold Standard): Characteristic Langerhans cells with "coffee-bean" cleaved nuclei and eosinophilic cytoplasm, confirmed by positive immunohistochemistry for CD1a and CD207 (langerin) (PMID: 29754886). S-100 protein positivity is supportive.

Imaging: Skeletal survey for bone lesions; HRCT for PLCH (nodules, cavitated nodules, thin/thick-walled cysts); MRI brain for pituitary/CNS; ¹⁸F-FDG PET-CT for staging. "Mean SUVmax was significantly higher in deceased patients than survivors (6.7 ± 1.8 vs. 4.7 ± 3.0; P = 0.01)" (PMID: 42087703).

Biomarkers: Cell-free BRAF V600E DNA for monitoring; CSF osteopontin for CNS-LCH (PMID: 29624648); serum MMP-7 and TNF-α for PLCH prognosis (PMID: 41720965).

Genetic Testing

BRAF V600E testing (allele-specific PCR or NGS) is first-line molecular testing. NGS panels covering BRAF, MAP2K1, ARAF, KRAS are recommended for V600E-negative cases (PMID: 37572153). Note: IHC for BRAF V600E may have limited sensitivity in some settings (PMID: 27041734).

Differential Diagnosis

  • Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD): CD1a-negative, long bone osteosclerosis, "hairy kidneys" (PMID: 41728905)
  • Rosai-Dorfman disease (RDD): S100+/CD1a-, emperipolesis
  • Juvenile xanthogranuloma (JXG): CD1a-/CD207- with Touton giant cells
  • Lymphangioleiomyomatosis: Cystic lung disease in women
  • Osteomyelitis, Ewing sarcoma: Bone lesion mimics

"A minimum immunohistochemical panel including CD68 or CD163, S100, CD1a, langerin, and BRAF V600E, combined with morphologic features can establish a histologic diagnosis" (PMID: 41651609).


11. Outcome/Prognosis

Survival and Mortality

{{figure:lch_final_summary.png|caption=Comprehensive summary of LCH disease characterization showing mutation spectrum, survival stratified by disease extent and risk organ involvement, multi-organ involvement patterns, and knowledge base statistics}}

Patient Group 5-year EFS 10-year OS Source
Single-system LCH 95.2% 93.8% PMID: 41546712; PMID: 42087703
MS-LCH RO- 58.4% 74.2% (all MS) PMID: 41546712
MS-LCH RO+ 44.1% 50% PMID: 41546712; PMID: 42087703
Pediatric (SEER) 96.6% (5yr OS) PMID: 36758375
Adult (SEER) 88.5% (5yr OS) PMID: 36758375

Key prognostic factors: - Age <1 year: HR 13.79 for mortality (PMID: 41546712) - Age ≥60 years: HR 22.12 for mortality (PMID: 36122574) - Multiple site involvement: HR 3.12 (PMID: 41796299) - Risk organ involvement: Strongest adverse prognostic factor - Baseline SUVmax on FDG-PET (PMID: 42087703) - BRAF genotype: BRAFindel associated with inferior survival (PMID: 39513946)

Secondary Malignancy Risk

Overall SIR 2.07 (95% CI 1.74–2.45) for secondary primary malignancies after LCH (PMID: 36758375). Highest risk for hematologic malignancies in children.

Complications

  • Permanent endocrine deficits (DI, GH deficiency, panhypopituitarism)
  • Progressive CNS neurodegeneration (45% 5-year risk even on MAPKi)
  • Sclerosing cholangitis (hepatic fibrosis requiring transplant)
  • Pulmonary fibrosis and chronic respiratory failure
  • Pathological fractures and orthopedic deformity

12. Treatment

First-Line Pharmacotherapy

Treatment MAXO Term Indication
Vinblastine + Prednisone (12 months) MAXO:0000058 MS-LCH, multifocal SS-LCH
Topical corticosteroids MAXO:0001479 Localized skin/bone
Smoking cessation MAXO:0009015 PLCH

"Systemic treatment with steroids and vinblastine for 12 months is the standard first-line regimen" with reactivation rates of 30–50% (PMID: 29754886).

Targeted Therapies (MAPK Inhibitors)

Agent Target CHEBI/DrugBank Evidence
Vemurafenib BRAF V600E CHEBI:63637 / DB08881 98% response in refractory BRAF+ LCH
Dabrafenib BRAF V600E CHEBI:75045 / DB08912 Alternative BRAF inhibitor
Trametinib MEK1/2 CHEBI:75998 / DB08911 86.4% PFS during treatment; mutation-agnostic (PMID: 41823178)
Cobimetinib MEK1/2 CHEBI:90227 / DB09053 FDA-approved for adult histiocytoses (2022)

Largest MAPKi study (288 children, 26 countries): "Short-term responses (<8 weeks) ranged from 98% (R-RO+ and R-RO-), to 30% (lung) to none (ND, DI and SC)" with 5-year survival of 98%. However, after 113 patients discontinued MAPKi, 69 (61%) relapsed. Critically, "among the 143 assessable patients without ND-LCH at MAPKi onset, 60 developed ND: 45% 5-year risk" (PMID: 41678955).

Why MAPKi doesn't cure: iPSC modeling revealed that "MAPKis do not affect myeloid progenitors but reduce only the mature CD14+ cell population" (PMID: 39630039), mechanistically explaining relapse upon drug withdrawal.

Resistance: RAF-independent MEK mutations are "associated with worse progression-free survival with MEK1/2 inhibition." ERK inhibition may overcome this resistance (PMID: 41135521).

Salvage Therapies

Treatment Key Evidence
Cladribine 70% response at 6 months in PLCH (PMID: 41611252)
Clofarabine Effective for refractory RO- LCH (PMID: 34725963); proposed for GI-LCH (PMID: 40988414)
Cytarabine Salvage for progressive disease

Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation

Allo-HSCT is reserved for refractory MS-LCH. Japanese nationwide study (n=30): 17/30 (57%) alive. "The six patients with NAD/AD-r experienced better outcomes than the 20 with AD-s/AD-p (5-year OS, 100% vs. 54.5%, respectively, p = 0.040). Disease state at the time of HSCT was the most important prognostic factor" (PMID: 31758416).

Immunotherapy (Experimental)

Combined MAPKi + anti-PD-1 showed synergy in mouse models: "combined treatment with MAPK inhibitor and anti-PD-1 significantly decreased both CD8+ T cells and myeloid LCH cells in a synergistic fashion" (PMID: 33075814).

Supportive Care

  • Hormone replacement: Lifelong desmopressin for DI, thyroid/cortisol/GH replacement (MAXO:0000583)
  • Lung transplantation: For end-stage PLCH
  • Liver transplantation: For end-stage sclerosing cholangitis

13. Prevention

Primary Prevention

No established primary prevention strategies exist given the somatic mutation-driven etiology. Smoking avoidance/cessation is the only modifiable risk factor for PLCH. "Smoking cessation is the most important recommendation for PLCH patients" (PMID: 29083024).

Secondary Prevention

No population-based screening programs exist. Early detection relies on clinical awareness. cfBRAF V600E monitoring can detect early relapse.

Tertiary Prevention

Long-term surveillance for reactivation, endocrine sequelae (annual pituitary hormone panels, MRI), neuropsychological monitoring, and secondary malignancy screening. "Adequate follow-up to monitor for disease progression, relapse, and sequelae is recommended in all patients" (PMID: 29754886).

Genetic Counseling

LCH is not inherited. Genetic counseling provides reassurance; no increased risk to family members. The ART-LCH association may warrant awareness in reproductive medicine.


14. Other Species / Natural Disease

Canine LCH

  • Species: Canis lupus familiaris (NCBI Taxon: 9615)
  • Cell line FB-LCH01 established; maintained E-cadherin expression consistent with Langerhans cell origin (PMID: 30884050)
  • mRNA sequencing showed MAPK pathway activation in LCH cell lines, mirroring human disease. CDK4/6 inhibitor palbociclib showed growth inhibitory effects (PMID: 35278028)

Feline Pulmonary LCH

  • Species: Felis catus (NCBI Taxon: 9685)
  • Rare disease of middle-aged to older cats; first antemortem diagnosis via BAL cytology with CD1a immunocytochemistry in a 9-year-old British shorthair (PMID: 37914537)

Comparative Biology

The conservation of MAPK pathway-driven histiocytic disorders across humans, dogs, and cats supports the fundamental role of this signaling cascade in dendritic cell biology and disease. "Fragmentation of the E-cadherin cell adhesion molecule may be associated with the loss of cell adhesion and increased abilities of invasion and migration of neoplastic cells" (PMID: 34907644).


15. Model Organisms

Mouse Models

Model Type Key Application
BRAF V600E CD11c-Cre + cigarette smoke Conditional transgenic + environmental Recapitulates PLCH hallmarks (PMID: 31961828)
BRAF V600E CD11c LCH mouse Conditional transgenic PD-1/MAPKi synergy demonstrated (PMID: 33075814)
SCID xenograft (canine LCH) Xenograft Metastasis modeling (PMID: 30884050)

Human iPSC Model (2025)

The BRAF V600E/WT iPSC model represents a transformative advance and the first human in vitro model for LCH. It recapitulates key disease features: myelomonocytic skewing, spontaneous CD1a+/CD207+ cell differentiation from CD14+ progenitors, and neurodegeneration in co-culture systems. Critically, it revealed that "MAPKis do not affect myeloid progenitors but reduce only the mature CD14+ cell population" (PMID: 39630039), explaining why LCH relapses after MAPKi withdrawal.

Model Limitations

  • Mouse models do not fully recapitulate multisystem dissemination
  • iPSC models lack in vivo tissue architecture and systemic immune context
  • No single model captures all disease manifestations (bone, skin, CNS, liver)
  • Species-specific differences in immune microenvironment composition

Mechanistic Model: Integrated Pathogenesis

┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│              SOMATIC MAPK MUTATION                            │
│  (BRAF V600E ~50% | MAP2K1 ~15% | BRAF indel ~15%)          │
└────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────────┘
         │
  ┌──────────────┴──────────────┐
  ▼                             ▼
  EARLY PROGENITOR              COMMITTED PRECURSOR
  (CD34+/c-Kit+/Flt3+)         (tissue DC precursor)
  │                             │
  ▼                             ▼
  HIGH-RISK MULTISYSTEM          LOW-RISK SINGLE-SYSTEM
  (liver, spleen, BM)           (bone, skin, lung)
  │                             │
  └──────────────┬──────────────┘
         ▼
   MISGUIDED MYELOID DIFFERENTIATION
   → CD1a+/CD207+ pathological cells
         │
   ┌─────────────┼─────────────┐
   ▼             ▼             ▼
      TISSUE         IMMUNE        CYTOKINE
     HOMING        EXHAUSTION       STORM
  (CCL20/CCL7)   (PD-1+ T cells)  (OPN, TNF-α)
   │             │             │
   └─────────────┼─────────────┘
         ▼
 GRANULOMATOUS LESION
         │
   ┌─────────────┼─────────────┐
   ▼             ▼             ▼
      OSTEOLYSIS    FIBROSIS    NEURODEGENERATION
      (bone)        (liver,     (mutant microglia →
    lung)       neuronal loss)

Key therapeutic insight: MAPKi eliminates mature pathological cells (↓CD14+ population) but spares mutant progenitors → 61% relapse on discontinuation. Neurodegeneration driven by tissue-resident mutant microglia is not prevented by MAPKi.


Evidence Base

Landmark Papers

Paper PMID Key Contribution
Clinicogenomic associations in childhood LCH 36083130 Largest study (n=377) establishing MAPK mutation spectrum
Misguided myeloid differentiation model 25430560 Proposed LCH as inflammatory myeloid neoplasia
BM myeloid progenitors as mutation carriers 32750121 Proved hematopoietic progenitor origin
BRAFV600E iPSC model 39630039 Explained MAPKi failure; first human model
Long-term MAPKi (n=288) 41678955 Largest treatment study; 45% ND risk
Mutant microglia in neurodegeneration 40081365 Identified CNS pathogenic mechanism
CS-BRAF V600E mouse model 31961828 Gene-environment interaction in PLCH
England national registry 36122574 Definitive epidemiological data
SPP1 transcriptomics 20220088 Key biomarker identification
CSF osteopontin 29624648 CNS-specific biomarker
Secondary malignancy risk (SEER) 36758375 SIR 2.07 for secondary cancers
ART/ICSI association 39383799 Novel environmental/epigenetic risk factor
RAF-independent MEK mutations 41135521 Treatment resistance mechanism
Allo-HSCT outcomes (Japan) 31758416 Salvage transplant data
40-year survival (Thailand) 41546712 Comprehensive prognostic data

Limitations and Knowledge Gaps

  1. Mutation-negative cases (~20%): Alternative drivers in MAPK-wild-type LCH remain uncharacterized.

  2. Neurodegeneration prevention: No therapy prevents or reverses LCH-associated neurodegeneration. The 45% 5-year risk even on MAPKi is the most critical unmet need.

  3. Optimal MAPKi duration: No consensus on when to stop targeted therapy. 61% relapse on discontinuation, but indefinite treatment carries toxicity.

  4. Adult LCH underrepresentation: Most trials focus on children. Adult PLCH and non-pulmonary adult LCH lack evidence-based algorithms.

  5. Epigenomic profiling: No large-scale methylation or chromatin studies of LCH lesions exist.

  6. ART-LCH link: The SIR 4.02–5.41 association needs replication and mechanistic investigation.

  7. Low-income settings: Nearly all data come from high-income countries; LCH burden in LMICs is virtually unreported.

  8. Metabolomics: No metabolomic profiling of LCH has been published.


Proposed Follow-up Experiments/Actions

  1. Target mutant progenitors: Develop MAPKi + progenitor-directed combination strategies using the iPSC platform (PMID: 39630039) for drug screening.

  2. Neurodegeneration prevention trial: CSF-penetrant MAPK inhibitors or microglial-targeted therapies, given the mutant microglia mechanism (PMID: 40081365).

  3. ERK inhibitor clinical trials: For RAF-independent MEK mutation-driven resistant disease (PMID: 41135521).

  4. Combined MAPKi + anti-PD-1 trial: Clinical translation of preclinical synergy (PMID: 33075814).

  5. Prospective CSF osteopontin monitoring: Validate as neurodegeneration early warning biomarker.

  6. Epigenetic profiling of ART-conceived LCH patients: Investigate methylation signatures explaining elevated risk.

  7. International adult LCH treatment protocol: Consensus guidelines for adult LCH.

  8. Whole-genome sequencing of mutation-negative cases: Identify novel drivers in the ~20% without detectable MAPK alterations.


Comprehensive Ontology Term Compilation

HPO Terms with Estimated Frequencies

HPO ID Term Frequency
HP:0002797 Osteolysis 50–80%
HP:0000988 Skin rash 30–50%
HP:0000873 Diabetes insipidus 11.5–24%
HP:0002716 Lymphadenopathy 15–30%
HP:0002240 Hepatomegaly 15–20% (MS-LCH)
HP:0001744 Splenomegaly 10–15% (MS-LCH)
HP:0000388 Otitis media 15–25%
HP:0002180 Neurodegeneration 20–45% (long-term)
HP:0001945 Fever Common in MS-LCH
HP:0006528 Chronic lung disease ~10% pediatric
HP:0002107 Pneumothorax ~10% pulmonary LCH
HP:0001876 Pancytopenia Rare (BM involvement)
HP:0001251 Cerebellar ataxia Subset of ND-LCH
HP:0100543 Cognitive impairment 20–30% survivors
HP:0040075 Hypopituitarism 5–15%
HP:0000824 Decreased GH response Variable
HP:0001051 Seborrheic dermatitis 30–50% infants
HP:0002094 Dyspnea Adult PLCH
HP:0002014 Diarrhea Rare (GI involvement)
HP:0030991 Sclerosing cholangitis ~5% MS-LCH

GO Terms

GO ID Term Category
GO:0000165 MAPK cascade BP
GO:0030099 Myeloid cell differentiation BP
GO:0006954 Inflammatory response BP
GO:0045087 Innate immune response BP
GO:0001774 Microglial cell activation BP
GO:0043066 Negative regulation of apoptosis BP
GO:0008283 Cell population proliferation BP
GO:0006468 Protein phosphorylation BP
GO:0004674 Protein Ser/Thr kinase activity MF
GO:0004708 MAP kinase kinase activity MF
GO:0005634 Nucleus CC
GO:0005829 Cytosol CC

CHEBI Terms

CHEBI ID Entity Role
CHEBI:27375 Vinblastine First-line
CHEBI:8382 Prednisone First-line
CHEBI:567361 Cladribine Second-line
CHEBI:28680 Cytarabine Salvage
CHEBI:681569 Clofarabine Salvage
CHEBI:63637 Vemurafenib BRAF inhibitor
CHEBI:75045 Dabrafenib BRAF inhibitor
CHEBI:75998 Trametinib MEK inhibitor
CHEBI:90227 Cobimetinib MEK inhibitor (FDA-approved)
CHEBI:50667 Mercaptopurine Maintenance
CHEBI:4450 Desmopressin DI treatment
CHEBI:17489 Nicotine Environmental risk factor

MAXO Terms

MAXO ID Term Application
MAXO:0000058 Chemotherapy VBL/pred, cladribine
MAXO:0001525 Targeted therapy BRAF/MEK inhibitors
MAXO:0000647 Hormone replacement DI, APD
MAXO:0000747 HSCT Salvage refractory LCH
MAXO:0000004 Surgical procedure Curettage, biopsy
MAXO:0000015 Biopsy Diagnostic
MAXO:0000502 Immunohistochemistry CD1a, CD207
MAXO:0000127 Genetic testing BRAF, MAP2K1
MAXO:0000610 PET-CT Staging
MAXO:0000571 MRI CNS evaluation
MAXO:0000079 Smoking cessation PLCH prevention
MAXO:0001494 Checkpoint inhibitor Experimental
MAXO:0000169 Topical administration Localized skin
MAXO:0000375 Intralesional injection Bone lesions
MAXO:0001175 Lung transplantation End-stage PLCH
MAXO:0001176 Liver transplantation Sclerosing cholangitis

Pathway Terms

ID Pathway
KEGG:hsa04010 MAPK signaling
KEGG:hsa04151 PI3K-Akt signaling
KEGG:hsa04380 Osteoclast differentiation
R-HSA-6802957 Oncogenic MAPK signaling
R-HSA-5684996 MAPK1/MAPK3 signaling
WP382 MAPK signaling pathway

Report generated from systematic review of 106 publications across 5 research iterations, with 14 confirmed findings supported by validated citations. Last updated: 2026-05-14.