Overview
HHV-8 associated vascular malignancy. Four epidemiologic forms: AIDS-related (most common), classic (elderly Mediterranean), endemic (African), iatrogenic (transplant). HAART dramatically reduced AIDS-KS incidence. Treatment stratified by extent: local therapy (radiation, intralesional chemotherapy) for limited disease, systemic chemotherapy (liposomal doxorubicin, paclitaxel) for visceral or extensive cutaneous. Immune reconstitution cornerstone in AIDS-KS.
Clinical Management: Treatment individualized based on stage, histology, molecular profile, and patient factors. Multidisciplinary tumor board review recommended. Refer to NCCN guidelines and FDA package inserts for complete dosing and administration.
Epidemiology & Impact
Kaposi sarcoma is a vascular malignancy caused by human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8/KSHV). Four epidemiologic forms exist: AIDS-associated (most common in Western countries), classic (elderly Mediterranean/Eastern European men), endemic (sub-Saharan Africa), and iatrogenic (transplant recipients). AIDS-associated KS has decreased dramatically with antiretroviral therapy but remains the most common AIDS-defining malignancy. The disease ranges from indolent skin lesions to aggressive visceral involvement.
Molecular Biology & Biomarkers
KS pathogenesis centers on HHV-8 infection, which encodes viral oncogenes including vFLIP (NF-kappaB activation), vCyclin (cell cycle bypass), and LANA (p53/Rb inhibition). The virus also produces viral IL-6 and vGPCR promoting angiogenesis. KS tumor cells have a mixed endothelial-mesenchymal phenotype. Immune suppression is critical for disease progression, explaining the association with HIV and immunosuppressive medications.
Kaposi sarcoma is caused by human herpesvirus-8 (HHV-8, also known as KSHV). The virus encodes several oncogenic proteins: vFLIP activates NF-ΞΊB, vCyclin drives cell cycle progression, and LANA maintains viral episomes and inhibits p53/RB. Viral IL-6 (vIL-6) promotes angiogenesis and inflammation. The KSHV-encoded G protein-coupled receptor (vGPCR) activates VEGF signaling, explaining the highly vascular nature of KS lesions. HIV-associated KS occurs in the setting of immune depletion, and immune reconstitution with antiretroviral therapy (ART) can lead to tumor regression. The PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway is constitutively activated in KS, providing rationale for mTOR inhibitor use in transplant-associated KS.
Evolving Treatment Landscape
For AIDS-associated KS, antiretroviral therapy alone can induce tumor regression by restoring immune surveillance. Progressive or visceral disease requires liposomal doxorubicin as first-line systemic therapy (45-60% response). Paclitaxel is second-line. Pomalidomide has shown activity in resistant AIDS-KS. Checkpoint immunotherapy is being investigated cautiously. For transplant-associated KS, reduction of immunosuppression is the primary approach.
For HIV-associated KS, optimized antiretroviral therapy (ART) is the foundation of treatment and can lead to complete remission of limited disease. Systemic chemotherapy is indicated for advanced visceral disease, rapidly progressive KS, or immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) KS. Pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (Doxil/Caelyx) is first-line, achieving response rates of 45-60%. Paclitaxel is an effective second-line agent. Pomalidomide is FDA-approved for AIDS-related KS after failure of ART and prior systemic therapy. For transplant-associated KS, switching from calcineurin inhibitors to sirolimus (mTOR inhibitor) can induce regression. Checkpoint inhibitors (pembrolizumab, nivolumab) have shown activity in clinical trials but require careful monitoring in HIV-positive and transplant populations.
Approved Kaposi Sarcoma Therapies
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQWhat causes Kaposi sarcoma?
KS is caused by HHV-8 virus combined with immune suppression from HIV, transplant medications, or aging. ART can restore immune control and cause KS regression.
What systemic treatments are available?
Liposomal doxorubicin is standard first-line for progressive KS, with paclitaxel as second-line and pomalidomide for resistant disease.
Can KS be prevented?
In the HIV setting, early antiretroviral therapy preventing immunosuppression is the most effective prevention. For transplant recipients, awareness and dermatologic screening enable early detection.
Active Clinical Trials
PHASE 3 Late-Stage Pivotal Trials
HAART + Chemotherapy
Standard: Liposomal doxorubicin, Paclitaxel for AIDS-KS
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PHASE 2 Efficacy and Safety Studies
Immunotherapy
Drugs: Checkpoint inhibitors, pomalidomide
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PHASE 1 First-in-Human Dose-Finding Studies
Phase 1 trials establish safety profiles and determine recommended doses for novel anticancer agents in early-stage development.
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