Clinical practice guidelines for the management of basal cell carcinoma in Gorlin syndrome
- PMID: 41396574
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jaad.2025.10.076
Clinical practice guidelines for the management of basal cell carcinoma in Gorlin syndrome
Abstract
Background: Gorlin syndrome (GS) is a rare genetic disorder characterized by a predisposition to developing numerous basal cell carcinomas (BCCs) throughout life. The absence of specific clinical guidelines for managing BCCs in GS has resulted in fragmented care and inconsistent treatment approaches.
Objective: To develop evidence-based guidelines for managing BCCs in GS, addressing both clinical and psychosocial challenges.
Methods: A multidisciplinary panel employed a modified Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation approach, integrating systematic reviews, expert surveys, patient interviews, and Delphi consensus rounds to formulate recommendations.
Results: The final guidelines include 47 recommendations spanning topical therapies, systemic treatments, surgical interventions, and multimodal strategies. Additional recommendations emphasize shared decision-making, comprehensive monitoring, and psychosocial support to address the chronic nature of BCCs in GS. Specific therapies, including hedgehog inhibitors and field treatments, are recommended to reduce surgical fatigue and enhance quality of life.
Limitations: Given the scarcity of GS-specific data, expert consensus informed several recommendations, highlighting the need for ongoing research to strengthen the evidence base.
Conclusion: These guidelines provide a structured framework for improving BCC management in GS, thereby enhancing clinical outcomes and patient quality of life. This process serves as a model for creating patient-centered guidelines in rare conditions with limited evidence.
Keywords: Gorlin syndrome; basal cell carcinoma; clinical guidelines; hedgehog pathway inhibitors; multidisciplinary care; patient-centered care; quality of life; shared decision-making.
Copyright © 2025 American Academy of Dermatology, Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflicts of interest A. Vidimos is the investigator for Merck (2021) and Regeneron (2020). A.A. Bar received honorarium (< $5000) related to cemiplimab (2022). A.L. Chang is the investigator and advisory board member for Regeneron, Merck, Novartis and is an advisory board member for Feldan. A. Cognetta is the speaker for Regeneron/Sanofi (2022). E. Billingsley received research funding from Palvella (2022) and Pellepharm (2020-2022). E. Ruiz is a consultant and investigator for Regeneron, Merck, Genentech and is in the advisory board for Checkpoint Therapeutics. E. Smith has educational roles with Gather-Ed and Association for Community Cancer Centers. E. Epstein received research support from Pellepharm and Sol-Gel. J.Y. Tang received research support from BridgeBio. J. Carucci received research grant from Regeneron. K. Duffy is the speaker for Sanofi-Regeneron. L. Council is a consultant for AbbVie, Castle Biosciences, and Regeneron. M. Sauder is in the Advisory board for Sun Pharma, Merck, and Sanofi. M. Kheterpal is the speaker for Sun Pharma and Regeneron. N. Gold received research support from Pfi+zer. R. Whitson is an employee of Novartis. S. Fosko is the speaker and investigator for Genentech. The other authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
