$\DeclareMathOperator\lcm{lcm}$Let $p_k$ be the $k$th prime number. Set $$L(n) = \lcm(p_1-1, p_2-1, \dotsc, p_n-1). $$
What can we say about the growth of $L(n)$? Trivially, one has that $L(n) < p_1p_2 \dotsb p_n$. One can do better than that since after $2$, every prime is odd. Thus, if $n \geq 3$, one has $$L(n) \leq \frac{p_1p_2 \cdots p_n}{2^{n-1}}.$$ And one can continue with larger primes, using explicit versions of Dirichlet's theorem on arithmetic progressions, to put in powers of 3, and then 5, and so on in the denominator in the same way.
In the other direction, one can use Linnik's theorem to get lower bounds on $L(n)$ but these are weak.
$L(n)$ is A058254 in the OEIS, but that doesn't give any non-trivial bounds, even heuristically.
Question: Can we get an asymptotic to $\log L(n)$, ideally with explicit bounds? Closely related: is it true that $\log L(n) = o(p_n)$? This is a natural bound to ask about because $\log \lcm (p_1, p_2 \cdots p_n ) = \sum_{p \leq p_n} \log p \sim p_n$ by the Prime Number Theorem.
For the application I'm interested in, I'd like to then use this to get explicit bounds on $\lcm (p_{n}-1, p_{n+1}-1, p_{n+2}-1, \dotsc, p_{n+m}-1)$ where $m$ is at least about $n^2$, and I would like that $\log \lcm (p_{n}-1, p_{n+1}-1, p_{n+2}-1, \dotsc, p_{n+m}-1)$ grows slower than $\sum_{p_n \leq p \leq p_{n+m}} \log p \sim p_{n+m}$. So it may be possible to get a useful bound even without an asymptotic for $L(n)$.