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1.
Exp Dermatol ; 33(7): e15129, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38984465

ABSTRACT

Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is an inflammatory skin disease characterized by painful nodules, abscesses and purulent secretions in intertriginous regions. Intense pruritus frequently accompanies HS lesions, adding further discomfort for patients. While Th17 pathway activation is implicated in HS pathogenesis, disease mechanisms are still not fully understood, and therapeutics are lacking. Previous reports raise a potential role for eosinophils in HS, showing a strong association of eosinophil levels with disease severity. To investigate eosinophils in HS, we recruited patients and matched healthy controls and then performed flow-cytometry studies, eosinophil stimulation assays, and lesional skin staining for eosinophils. We found that HS patients reported similar levels of pain and itch. Compared to matched controls, HS blood exhibited decreased mature eosinophils and increased numbers of immature eosinophils, coupled with a significant increase in dermal eosinophilic infiltrates. Additionally, IL-17RA+ eosinophils were highly and significantly correlated with multiple HS-related clinical scores. In both stimulated and unstimulated conditions, HS eosinophils showed an inflammatory phenotype versus controls, including an increase in costimulatory T- and B-cell markers (e.g. CD5 and CD40) following all stimulations (TNFα/IL-17A/IL-17F). These findings highlight the significance of pruritus in HS and suggest a higher turnover of eosinophils in HS blood, potentially due to the consumption of eosinophils in skin lesions. Our data delineate the features and functions of eosinophils in HS and suggest that eosinophils participate in disease pathogenesis, advancing Th17-related inflammation. Further studies are needed to investigate eosinophils' response to current HS treatments and their potential as a therapeutic target in the disease.


Subject(s)
Eosinophils , Hidradenitis Suppurativa , Humans , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/immunology , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/complications , Eosinophils/metabolism , Male , Adult , Female , Middle Aged , Case-Control Studies , Pruritus/etiology , Pruritus/immunology , Interleukin-17/metabolism , Skin/pathology , Skin/metabolism , Inflammation , Severity of Illness Index , Pain/etiology
2.
Exp Dermatol ; 33(5): e15087, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38685821

ABSTRACT

Hidradenitis Suppurativa (HS) is a chronic autoinflammatory skin disease with activated keratinocytes, tunnel formation and a complex immune infiltrate in tissue. The HS microbiome is polymicrobial with an abundance of commensal gram-positive facultative (GPs) Staphylococcus species and gram-negative anaerobic (GNA) bacteria like Prevotella, Fusobacterium and Porphyromonas with increasing predominance of GNAs with disease severity. We sought to define the keratinocyte response to bacteria commonly isolated from HS lesions to probe pathogenic relationships between HS and the microbiome. Type strains of Prevotella nigrescens, Prevotella melaninogenica, Prevotella intermedia, Prevotella asaccharolytica, Fusobacterium nucleatum, as well as Staphylococcus aureus and the normal skin commensal Staphylococcus epidermidis were heat-killed and co-incubated with normal human keratinocytes. RNA was collected and analysed using RNAseq and RT-qPCR. The supernatant was collected from cell culture for protein quantification. Transcriptomic profiles between HS clinical samples and stimulated keratinocytes were compared. Co-staining of patient HS frozen sections was used to localize bacteria in lesions. A mouse intradermal injection model was used to investigate early immune recruitment. TLR4 and JAK inhibitors were used to investigate mechanistic avenues of bacterial response inhibition. GNAs, especially F. nucleatum, stimulated vastly higher CXCL8, IL17C, CCL20, IL6, TNF and IL36γ transcription in normal skin keratinocytes than the GPs S. epidermidis and S. aureus. Using RNAseq, we found that F. nucleatum (and Prevotella) strongly induced the IL-17 pathway in keratinocytes and overlapped with transcriptome profiles of HS patient clinical samples. Bacteria were juxtaposed to activated keratinocytes in vivo, and F. nucleatum strongly recruited murine neutrophil and macrophage migration. Both the TLR4 and pan-JAK inhibitors reduced cytokine production. Detailed transcriptomic profiling of healthy skin keratinocytes exposed to GNAs prevalent in HS revealed a potent, extensive inflammatory response vastly stronger than GPs. GNAs stimulated HS-relevant genes, including many genes in the IL-17 response pathway, and were significantly associated with HS tissue transcriptomes. The close association of activated keratinocytes with bacteria in HS lesions and innate infiltration in murine skin cemented GNA pathogenic potential. These novel mechanistic insights could drive future targeted therapies.


Subject(s)
Hidradenitis Suppurativa , Keratinocytes , Keratinocytes/immunology , Keratinocytes/microbiology , Keratinocytes/metabolism , Humans , Animals , Mice , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/microbiology , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/immunology , Staphylococcus aureus/immunology , Staphylococcus epidermidis/immunology , Fusobacterium nucleatum/immunology , Transcriptome , Cytokines/metabolism , Bacteria, Anaerobic , Interleukin-17/metabolism , Microbiota , Prevotella/immunology
3.
J Am Acad Dermatol ; 90(4): 749-758, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38049071

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) has a high unmet need for better treatments. Biopsies are considered the gold standard for studying molecular alterations in skin. A reproducible, minimally invasive approach is needed for longitudinal monitoring in trials and in pediatric populations. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether skin tape strips can detect molecular alterations in HS and identify biomarkers of disease activity. METHODS: We performed RNA sequencing on tape strips collected from lesional and healthy-appearing (nonlesional) HS skin (n = 22) and healthy controls (n = 21). We correlated the expression of skin biomarkers between tape strips and a previously published gene-signature of HS biopsies. RESULTS: Tape strips detected upregulation of known HS biomarkers (eg, Interleukin[IL]-17A) in nonlesional and/or lesional skin and also identified novel clinically actionable targets, including OX40 and JAK3. The expression of Th17 and tumor necrosis factor-α pathways were highly correlated between tape strips and biopsies. HS clinical severity was significantly associated with expression of biomarkers (eg tumor necrosis factor-α , IL-17 A/F, OX40, JAK1-3, IL-4R) in HS lesional and/or nonlesional skin. LIMITATIONS: Sample size. Tape stripping is limited in depth. CONCLUSION: This study validates tape strips as a minimally-invasive approach to identify cutaneous biomarkers in HS. This provides a novel avenue for monitoring treatment efficacy and a potential step toward individualized therapy in HS.


Subject(s)
Hidradenitis Suppurativa , Child , Humans , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/diagnosis , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/genetics , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/drug therapy , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/therapeutic use , Skin/pathology , Biomarkers/metabolism , Up-Regulation
4.
Exp Dermatol ; 32(10): 1834-1847, 2023 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37272375

ABSTRACT

Interleukin (IL)-23-independent IL-17A production has been suggested to be involved in persistent manifestations of psoriatic disease, including anti-IL-12/23-refractory psoriatic plaques; this study aimed to test this hypothesis by investigating the clinical and molecular effects of direct IL-17A (with secukinumab) versus selective IL-23 inhibition (with guselkumab) in patients with anti-IL-12/23 (ustekinumab)-refractory psoriatic plaques. A 16-week, randomized, open-label, parallel-group, Phase IIa study (ARROW, NCT03553823) was conducted in patients with ≥1 active psoriatic plaque (total clinical score [TCS] ≥6) at screening despite treatment with ustekinumab, and a Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score 1-10. Patients were randomized 1:1 to receive secukinumab 300 mg (n = 20) or guselkumab 100 mg (n = 20). Biopsies from one refractory ('target plaque') were obtained at baseline and Week 16. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients whose ustekinumab-refractory target plaque achieved clear/almost clear status (TCS 0-2) at Week 16. Transcriptomic and histological analyses were conducted on target plaques to determine the molecular effects of direct IL-17A versus selective IL-23 inhibition. At Week 16, target plaque clear/almost clear status was achieved in 60.0% of patients treated with secukinumab versus 40.0% of patients treated with guselkumab (p = 0.1715). Molecular analyses identified that secukinumab modulated a greater proportion of psoriasis disease transcriptome genes (72.1% vs. 48.0%) and resulted in more histological responders (72.2% vs. 53.3%) compared with guselkumab. Secukinumab demonstrated a greater clinical and molecular effect on ustekinumab-refractory psoriatic plaques versus guselkumab. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that IL-23-independent IL-17 mechanisms may be relevant to the inflammation driving refractory manifestations of psoriasis.


Subject(s)
Psoriasis , Ustekinumab , Humans , Antibodies, Monoclonal/therapeutic use , Double-Blind Method , Interleukin-17 , Interleukin-23 , Psoriasis/pathology , Severity of Illness Index , Treatment Outcome
5.
Allergy ; 78(4): 1047-1059, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36271804

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The mechanisms driving alopecia areata (AA) are still unclear, hindering development of targeted therapeutics. Specific Th2 targeting with dupilumab in AA provides a unique opportunity to dissect its pathogenesis and explore the role of Th2 pathway. METHODS: We evaluated changes in scalp biomarkers in AA patients (with and without concomitant atopy) randomized to weekly dupilumab or placebo for 24 weeks, followed by open-label dupilumab for 24 weeks. Changes in biomarker levels were measured at weeks 12, 24, and 48 and were also correlated with clinical hair regrowth. RESULTS: At week 24, preceding clinical hair regrowth outcomes, only dupilumab-treated patients presented significant suppression of cellular infiltrates, and multiple Th2-related, markers (CCL13/MCP-4, CCL18/PARC, CCL26/eotaxin-3, CCL24/Eotaxin-2), coupled with significant upregulation in the hair keratins. Th1-related suppression was evident later (week 48) when all patients received open-label dupilumab. Results were more pronounced in atopic AA patients, that showed 48% and 97% improvements in the lesional AA scalp profile at weeks 24 and 48, respectively, while 2% worsening was seen in the placebo arm at week 24. Moreover, placebo-treated patients presented 54% worsening in hair keratins when compared with baseline at week 24. At week 24, increases in hair keratins showed significant correlations only with decreases in Th2-related markers. CONCLUSIONS: Scalp biomarkers provide evidence of dupilumab efficacy in AA, detected even prior to clinical response, with exclusive correlations between early suppression of Th2 markers and increased hair keratins. These findings strengthen previous reports suggesting a possible role for Th2 cytokines as AA drivers.


Subject(s)
Alopecia Areata , Humans , Alopecia Areata/drug therapy , Scalp/metabolism , Keratins, Hair-Specific/therapeutic use , Virulence , Biomarkers
6.
J Allergy Clin Immunol ; 149(1): 135-144.e12, 2022 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34081946

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease presenting with diverse manifestations ranging from nodules and abscesses to draining tunnels. Whether the underlying inflammation from lesions extends to relatively healthy-appearing adjacent perilesional and distant nonlesional skin has not been systematically evaluated. OBJECTIVE: We sought to characterize lesional, perilesional, and nonlesional skin in patients with HS. METHODS: Skin biopsy samples were collected under ultrasound guidance from patients with active, untreated moderate-to-severe HS. Site-matched control biopsy samples from healthy volunteers were used for comparison. RESULTS: RNA sequencing demonstrated that HS skin clustered separately from healthy control skin, with perilesional and lesion skin clustering together and away from nonlesional skin. Immunohistochemistry analysis identified psoriasiform hyperplasia with keratin 16 positivity in both perilesional and lesional skin, with comparable levels of CD3+, CD11c+, and neutrophil elastase-positive cellular infiltration. There was a marked upregulation of IL-17 signaling in perilesional and lesional skin. HS samples clustered on the basis of expression of lipocalin-2 (LCN2), with samples characterized by high LCN2 expression in the skin exhibiting a differing transcriptomic profile with significantly higher overall inflammation than that of skin characterized by low LCN2 levels. CONCLUSIONS: Perilesional HS skin has a transcriptomic and molecular profile comparable to that of lesional skin. HS can be grouped into 2 distinct subtypes based on molecular levels of LCN2 in the skin, with the LCN2-high subtype exhibiting an overall higher inflammatory burden and an upregulation of targetable cytokines. To our knowledge, this is the first study to characterize a unique HS subtype (and a potential endotype) that may guide future therapeutic targets.


Subject(s)
Hidradenitis Suppurativa/immunology , Lipocalin-2/immunology , Skin/immunology , Adult , Aged , Clinical Trials as Topic , Female , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/diagnostic imaging , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/genetics , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/pathology , Humans , Inflammation/diagnostic imaging , Inflammation/genetics , Inflammation/immunology , Inflammation/pathology , Interleukin-17/immunology , Male , Middle Aged , Phenotype , Skin/diagnostic imaging , Skin/pathology , Transcriptome , Ultrasonography, Doppler , Young Adult
7.
J Allergy Clin Immunol ; 149(4): 1402-1412, 2022 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34678325

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The IL-36 pathway plays a key role in the pathogenesis of generalized pustular psoriasis (GPP). In a proof-of-concept clinical trial, treatment with spesolimab, an anti-IL-36 receptor antibody, resulted in rapid skin and pustular clearance in patients presenting with GPP flares. OBJECTIVE: We sought to compare the molecular profiles of lesional and nonlesional skin from patients with GPP or palmoplantar pustulosis (PPP) with skin from healthy volunteers, and to investigate the molecular changes after spesolimab treatment in the skin and blood of patients with GPP flares. METHODS: Pre- and post-treatment skin and blood samples were collected from patients with GPP who participated in a single-arm, phase I study (n = 7). Skin biopsies from patients with PPP (n = 8) and healthy volunteers (n = 16) were obtained for comparison at baseline. Biomarkers were assessed by RNA-sequencing, histopathology, and immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: In GPP and PPP lesions, 1287 transcripts were commonly upregulated or downregulated. Selected transcripts from the IL-36 signaling pathway were upregulated in untreated GPP and PPP lesions. In patients with GPP, IL-36 pathway-related signatures, TH1/TH17 and innate inflammation signaling, neutrophilic mediators, and keratinocyte-driven inflammation pathways were downregulated by spesolimab as early as week 1. Spesolimab also decreased related serum biomarkers and cell populations in the skin lesions from patients with GPP, including CD3+ T, CD11c+, and IL-36γ+ cells and lipocalin-2-expressing cells. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with GPP, spesolimab showed rapid modulation of commonly dysregulated molecular pathways in GPP and PPP, which may be associated with improved clinical outcomes.


Subject(s)
Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases , Psoriasis , Skin Diseases, Vesiculobullous , Acute Disease , Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized/therapeutic use , Chronic Disease , Humans , Inflammation , Psoriasis/metabolism
8.
Exp Dermatol ; 31(9): 1341-1351, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35474520

ABSTRACT

Psoriasis increases the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Biomarkers for cardiovascular (CV) risk stratification in psoriasis are lacking, and the effects of psoriasis biologics on CV risk reduction remain unclear. The goal of this study was to identify biomarkers of CV risk in psoriasis blood that are reduced by ustekinumab. We quantified 276 inflammatory and CV-related serum proteins with Olink's multiplex assay in 10 psoriasis patients (vs. 18 healthy controls) and after 12 weeks of ustekinumab treatment. For each protein down-regulated after treatment, the literature was reviewed for studies assessing the protein's association with CVD. Data were collected from each study to calculate CV risk thresholds for each protein, which were compared with protein levels in psoriasis patients before and after treatment. Our results showed that 43 out of 276 proteins were down-regulated after treatment, 25 of which were initially up-regulated at baseline (vs. controls, all p-values ≤0.1). 8 down-regulated proteins were initially elevated above thresholds associated with enhanced CV risk in the literature (myeloperoxidase, C-X-C motif chemokine 10, E-selectin, interleukin-6, cystatin B, von Willebrand factor, tumor necrosis factor receptor 1 and N-terminal prohormone brain natriuretic peptide). Treatment lowered these proteins to below their risk thresholds, except for IL-6, which was lowered but remained at its risk threshold despite successful psoriasis skin treatment. In summary, 12 weeks of ustekinumab treatment reduced serum proteins present at levels associated with CV risk in psoriasis patients. Further studies can evaluate these proteins as potential ustekinumab-modulated biomarkers of CV risk in psoriasis and the impact of ustekinumab on CV risk reduction.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases , Psoriasis , Biomarkers , Cardiovascular Diseases/etiology , Heart Disease Risk Factors , Humans , Interleukin-6 , Psoriasis/complications , Psoriasis/drug therapy , Psoriasis/pathology , Risk Factors , Severity of Illness Index , Ustekinumab/therapeutic use
9.
Allergy ; 77(3): 897-906, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34460948

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Treatments for alopecia areata (AA) patients with extensive scalp hair loss are limited, and recent evidence supports a role for type 2 T-cell (Th2)-immune response in AA. Dupilumab, a monoclonal antibody inhibiting Th2 signaling, approved for type 2 diseases including atopic dermatitis, was evaluated in AA patients. METHODS: Alopecia areata patients with and without concomitant atopic dermatitis were randomized 2:1 to receive weekly subcutaneous dupilumab (300 mg) or placebo for 24 weeks, followed by another 24-week dupilumab open-label phase. The primary outcome was change from baseline in the Severity of Alopecia Tool (SALT) score at week 24; secondary outcomes included a range of measures of hair regrowth. RESULTS: Forty and 20 patients were assigned to the dupilumab and placebo arms, respectively. At week 24, disease worsening was documented in the placebo arm, with a least-squares mean change in the SALT score of -6.5 (95% confidence-interval [CI], -10.4 to -2.6), versus a change of 2.2 (95% CI, -0.6 to 4.94) in the dupilumab arm (p < .05). After 48 weeks of dupilumab treatment, 32.5%, 22.5% and 15% of patients achieved SALT30 /SALT50 /SALT75 improvement, respectively, while in patients with baseline IgE ≥ 200 IU/ml response rates increased to 53.8%, 46.2%, and 38.5%, respectively. Moreover, baseline IgE predicts treatment response with 83% accuracy. No new safety signals were detected. CONCLUSIONS: This hypothesis-driven trial is the first to indicate the possible pathogenic role of the Th2 axis and Th2 targeting in AA patients. Patient selection based on baseline serum IgE levels may improve treatment results (Clinicaltrials.gov number, NCT03359356).


Subject(s)
Alopecia Areata , Dermatitis, Atopic , Alopecia Areata/drug therapy , Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized , Dermatitis, Atopic/complications , Dermatitis, Atopic/drug therapy , Double-Blind Method , Humans , Immunoglobulin E/therapeutic use , Treatment Outcome
10.
Br J Dermatol ; 187(2): 223-233, 2022 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35191018

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is an inflammatory skin disease with dysregulation of the interleukin (IL)-17 axis. Recently, we reported the clinical benefit of brodalumab, a human anti-IL-17 receptor A (IL-17RA) monoclonal antibody, in moderate-to-severe HS. OBJECTIVES: To characterize the molecular response to brodalumab in HS skin and serum, and to identify biomarkers of treatment response. METHODS: Ten participants, who received brodalumab 210 mg /1·5 mL subcutaneously at weeks 0, 1, 2, 4 and every 2 weeks thereafter, were included in this molecular profiling study (NCT03960268). RNA sequencing and immunohistochemistry of nonlesional, perilesional and lesional HS skin biopsies, and Olink high-throughput proteomics of serum at baseline, weeks 4 and 12 were assessed. RESULTS: At week 12, brodalumab led to a decrease of overall inflammation, and improvement of psoriasis-, keratinocyte- and neutrophil-related pathways. Despite perilesional and lesional skin exhibiting no differentially expressed genes at baseline, treatment response was best assessed in perilesional skin. In serum, brodalumab treatment decreased pathways involved in neutrophil inflammation. Patients with higher baseline expression of neutrophil-associated lipocalin-2 (LCN2) in the skin or IL-17A in the serum demonstrated greater decreases of HS-related inflammatory cytokines as measured in skin biopsies at week 12. CONCLUSIONS: IL-17RA inhibition by brodalumab decreases several pathogenic inflammatory axes in HS. Perilesional skin provides a valid and robust assessment of treatment response. Expression of LCN2 in skin or IL-17A in serum may be used as biomarkers to stratify patients that may have a superior molecular response to brodalumab.


Subject(s)
Hidradenitis Suppurativa , Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized , Biomarkers/metabolism , Humans , Inflammation , Interleukin-17/metabolism , Interleukins/metabolism , Skin/metabolism
11.
Br J Dermatol ; 187(4): 539-547, 2022 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35656793

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Although alopecia areata (AA) greatly impacts patients' quality of life (QoL), there is no adequate validation of AA-targeted QoL surveys in clinical trials, hindering sufficient representation of patient-reported outcomes. OBJECTIVES: Better understanding of patient-reported outcomes may guide treatment goals and future clinical trials. METHODS: In a recent randomized controlled trial testing dupilumab in AA, patients were administered the Alopecia Areata Quality of Life Index (AA-QLI) and the Alopecia Areata Symptom Impact Scale (AASIS) surveys, specifically evaluating QoL in patients with AA. An in-depth analysis was performed to assess the utility of these questionnaires in this patient population, both at baseline and after treatment, and to determine a threshold for improved patient-reported outcomes. RESULTS: While AASIS correlated with baseline Severity of Alopecia Tool (SALT) scores and with therapeutic response, AA-QLI showed no correlation with AA severity before or after treatment. Itch strongly correlated with serum IgE levels across both surveys. Using various approaches to estimate a discriminative threshold for decreased impact of AA on QoL (by AASIS) following treatment, a SALT score of 20 points or less post-treatment was associated with improved patient-reported outcomes, including both AA-related symptoms and items within the daily activities/feelings domain such as 'feeling sad' and 'feeling anxious or worry'. CONCLUSIONS: AASIS is better than AA-QLI to assess patient-reported outcomes. SALT ≤ 20 following treatment should be considered as a threshold for meaningful therapeutic outcome and as a clinical endpoint in future clinical trials for AA. What is already known about this topic? Alopecia areata greatly compromises quality of life, and affected patients have increased prevalences of depression, anxiety and social phobia. Despite the significant negative impact of the disease on patients' wellbeing, validation of targeted questionnaires in alopecia areata is lacking, and a therapeutic response threshold for improved patient-reported outcomes is unknown. What does this study add? This study investigated the utility of two different alopecia areata-targeted questionnaires - Alopecia Areata Quality of Life Index and Alopecia Areata Symptom Impact Scale (AASIS) - in a clinical trial setting. AASIS was found to correlate strongly with alopecia areata severity and clinical response. What are the clinical implications of this work? Patients with ≤ 20% scalp hair loss after treatment reported improvement in multiple quality-of-life items, suggesting this as a meaningful therapeutic outcome that may guide clinicians and improve the development of future clinical trials.


Subject(s)
Alopecia Areata , Alopecia , Alopecia Areata/drug therapy , Humans , Immunoglobulin E , Patient Reported Outcome Measures , Quality of Life , Surveys and Questionnaires
12.
J Am Acad Dermatol ; 86(2): 322-330, 2022 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34339761

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Although hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) shares some transcriptomic and cellular infiltrate features with psoriasis, their skin proteome remains unknown. OBJECTIVE: To define and compare inflammatory protein biomarkers of HS and psoriasis skin. METHODS: We assessed 92 inflammatory biomarkers in HS (n = 13), psoriasis (n = 11), and control skin (n = 11) using Olink high-throughput proteomics. We also correlated HS skin and blood biomarkers using proteomics and RNA sequencing. RESULTS: We identified 57 differentially expressed proteins (DEPs) in lesional psoriasis and 64 DEPs in lesional HS skin, compared to healthy controls. Both HS and psoriasis lesional skin demonstrated a significant upregulation of T helper 1 and T helper 17 proteins. Healthy-appearing perilesional HS skin had 63 DEPs compared to healthy controls. Nonlesional HS and psoriasis skin had 24 and 7 DEPs, respectively, compared to healthy controls. Tumor necrosis factor and 8 other proteins were significantly correlated with clinical severity in perilesional HS skin (2 cm from a nodule). LIMITATIONS: Inclusion of only moderate-to-severe patients and the cohort size. CONCLUSION: HS has a greater inflammatory profile and is more diffusely distributed compared with psoriasis. Proteins correlated with disease severity are potential disease mediators. Perilesional skin is comparably inflamed to lesional skin, suggesting the need to treat beyond skin nodules.


Subject(s)
Hidradenitis Suppurativa , Psoriasis , Biomarkers/metabolism , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/genetics , Humans , Proteome/metabolism , Psoriasis/pathology , Skin/pathology
13.
J Allergy Clin Immunol ; 147(6): 2213-2224, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33548397

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS), also known as acne inversa, is a chronic, painful, and burdensome inflammatory disease manifesting in nodules and abscesses, with progression to chronically draining tunnels in later-stage disease. OBJECTIVE: We sought to determine whether HS tunnels are immunologically active participants in disease activity. METHODS: Skin biopsy specimens were obtained by using ultrasound guidance in untreated patients with HS and those enrolled in an open-label study of brodalumab (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT03960268) for patients with moderate-to-severe HS. RESULTS: Immunohistochemistry of HS biopsy specimens demonstrated that the epithelialized HS tunnels recapitulate the psoriasiform epidermal hyperplasia morphology of the overlying epidermis, displaying molecular inflammation, including S100A7 (psoriasin) positivity, as well as features of epidermal skin, including loricrin, filaggrin, lipocalin-2, and Melan-A positive cells. Tunnels were associated with increased infiltration of T cells, dendritic cells, and neutrophils; formation of neutrophil extracellular traps, and increased expression of psoriasiform proinflammatory cytokines. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering demonstrated a separation of HS samples based on the presence or absence of tunnels. Tunnels isolated by microdissection had higher levels of epithelium-derived inflammatory cytokines compared with the overlying epidermis and healthy controls. Clinically, the size and draining of the tunnels were decreased with treatment with the IL-17RA antagonist brodalumab. CONCLUSION: These data suggest that tunnels are a source of inflammation in HS.


Subject(s)
Epidermis/metabolism , Epidermis/pathology , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/diagnosis , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/etiology , Biomarkers , Biopsy , Cytokines/metabolism , Disease Susceptibility , Filaggrin Proteins , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Inflammation Mediators/metabolism , Phenotype , Skin/pathology , Ultrasonography
14.
Exp Dermatol ; 30(3): 377-383, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33113259

ABSTRACT

Physician rating of cutaneous erythema is central to clinical dermatological assessment as well as quantification of outcome measures in clinical trials in a number of dermatologic conditions. However, issues with inter-rater reliability and variability in the setting of higher Fitzpatrick skin types make visual erythema assessment unreliable. We developed and validated a computer-assisted image-processing algorithm (EQscore) to reliably quantify erythema (across a range of skin types) in the dermatology clinical setting. Our image processing algorithm evaluated erythema based upon green light suppression differentials between affected and unaffected skin. A group of four dermatologists used a 4-point Likert scale as a human evaluation of similar erythematous patch tests. The algorithm and dermatologist scores were compared across 164 positive patch test reactions. The intra-class correlation coefficient of groups and the correlation coefficient between groups were calculated. The EQscore was validated on and independent image set of psoriasis, minimal erythema dose testing and steroid-induced blanching images. The reliability of the erythema quantification method produced an intra-class correlation coefficient of 0.84 for the algorithm and 0.67 for dermatologists. The correlation coefficient between groups was 0.85. The EQscore demonstrated high agreement with clinical scoring and superior reliability compared with clinical scoring, avoiding the pitfalls of erythema underrating in the setting of pigmentation. The EQscore is easily accessible (http://lab.rockefeller.edu/krueger/EQscore), user-friendly, and may allow dermatologists to more readily and accurately rate the severity of dermatological conditions and the response to therapeutic treatments.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Dermatitis/diagnostic imaging , Erythema/diagnostic imaging , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Severity of Illness Index , Biomarkers , Color , Humans , Observer Variation , Patch Tests , Photography , Reproducibility of Results , Skin/diagnostic imaging , Skin Pigmentation
15.
J Allergy Clin Immunol ; 145(3): 922-932, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31883845

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: IL-17 antagonists induce impressive clinical benefits in psoriasis, but it is unknown to what extent cellular and molecular psoriasis characteristics are suppressed by a clinically relevant dose/schedule of any IL-17-receptor antagonist. OBJECTIVE: We sought to examine the effects of the IL-17 receptor-A antagonist brodalumab, on clinical and molecular psoriasis features over a 12-week period. METHODS: A subset of patients (n = 116) enrolled in 3 phase-3 randomized clinical trials (AMAGINE -1 [Efficacy, Safety, and Withdrawal and Retreatment With Brodalumab in Moderate to Severe Plaque Psoriasis Subjects], -2 [P3 Study Brodalumab in Treatment of Moderate to Severe Plaque Psoriasis], and -3 [Efficacy and Safety of Brodalumab Compared With Placebo and Ustekinumab in Moderate to Severe Plaque Psoriasis in Subjects]) participated in a mechanistic substudy where punch biopsies were collected (lesional and nonlesional skin) between baseline and 12 weeks. This cohort included moderate-to-severe psoriasis patients treated with 140 mg (n = 46), 210 mg (n = 41) brodalumab, or placebo (n = 29). Key epidermal psoriatic features, including T-cell and dendritic cell subsets, were examined using immunohistochemistry. Treatment-induced changes in lesional skin gene expression profiles were evaluated using Affymetrix arrays. RESULTS: IL-17 receptor-A antagonism caused extensive improvements in clinical, histologic, and transcriptomic features of psoriasis. Cellular infiltrates (CD3+, CD8+, CD11c+, CD163+), markers of keratinocyte proliferation (Ki67+, KRT16), and inflammatory cytokines (IL-17A/C/F, IL-23A, IL-12B) decreased progressively, reaching close to nonlesional levels, paralleled by decreases in epidermal thickness. Psoriasis transcriptome gene expression improved ∼85% to 95% in responders whose psoriasis area severity index improved by 75% from baseline by week 12 (n = 63), compared with ∼30% to 65% in nonresponders (n = 12), while the residual disease genomic profile was 10% of the psoriasis transcriptome, which is less than for earlier generation drugs. IL-17-dependent gene expression, including keratinocyte genes, improved earlier and more extensively following brodalumab treatment compared with ustekinumab treatment (anti-IL-23/-IL-12). CONCLUSIONS: The clinically approved dose and schedule for brodalumab leads to nearly complete resolution of clinical, histologic, and transcriptomic features of psoriasis. Evidently, IL-17-induced release of keratinocyte-derived inflammatory mediators is a key driver of psoriasis pathogenesis.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized/therapeutic use , Dermatologic Agents/therapeutic use , Psoriasis/drug therapy , Transcriptome/drug effects , Adult , Aged , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Psoriasis/pathology , Receptors, Interleukin-17/antagonists & inhibitors
16.
J Am Acad Dermatol ; 83(5): 1341-1348, 2020 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32416208

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Hidradenitis suppurativa is an autoinflammatory disorder of keratinization, with dysregulation of T helper type 17 cytokines. Brodalumab is a monoclonal antibody that targets the interleukin (IL) 17 receptor A receptor. OBJECTIVES: To assess the safety and tolerability and clinical response at weeks 12 and 24 of brodalumab in moderate to severe HS. Ten participants with no history of inflammatory bowel disease were administered brodalumab 210 mg/1.5 mL subcutaneously at weeks 0, 1, and 2 and every 2 weeks thereafter until week 24. Participants were assessed for adverse events (grade 2/3 adverse events) and clinical response (Hidradenitis Suppurativa Clinical Response [HiSCR], Sartorius, International Hidradenitis Suppurativa Severity Scoring System [IHS4]), including ultrasonography and skin biopsies. RESULTS: All 10 participants completed the study. No grade 2/3 adverse events associated with the use of brodalumab were reported. All patients (100%) achieved HiSCR, and 80% achieved IHS4 category change at week 12. HiSCR achievement occurred as early as week 2, likely due to the unique blockade of IL-17A, IL-17C, and IL-17F by brodalumab. Significant improvements were seen in pain, itch, quality of life, and depression. CONCLUSIONS: Brodalumab was well tolerated in this HS cohort, with no serious adverse events and improvement in clinical outcomes. Alterations in dose frequency may be required in those with advanced disease, which requires further exploration.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized/administration & dosage , Dermatologic Agents/administration & dosage , Hidradenitis Suppurativa/drug therapy , Adult , Cohort Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Severity of Illness Index , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
17.
J Allergy Clin Immunol ; 144(4): 1036-1049, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31378305

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterized by IL-17-mediated immune responses. p38 is known to be highly activated in the psoriatic epidermis; however, whether p38 is involved in the development of psoriasis is unclear. OBJECTIVE: We sought to demonstrate that activation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase is sufficient to induce psoriatic inflammation in mice and that cutaneous p38 activities are the topical therapeutic targets for psoriasis. METHODS: A p38 activator, anisomycin, was applied daily to murine skin. Transcriptomic analyses were performed to evaluate the similarities of the skin responses to those in human psoriasis and the existing animal model. BIRB796, a small-molecule inhibitor targeting p38 activities, was applied to the murine psoriatic models topically or to human psoriatic skin specimens ex vivo. RESULTS: Topical treatment with anisomycin induced key signatures in psoriasis, such as epidermal thickening, neutrophil infiltration, and gene expression of Il1a, Il1b, Il6, Il24, Cxcl1, Il23a, and Il17a, in treated murine skin. These responses were fully abrogated by topical treatment with BIRB796, and were reduced in IL-17A-deficient mice. Transcriptomic analyses demonstrated the similarities of anisomycin-induced dermatitis to human psoriasis and imiquimod-induced murine psoriatic dermatitis. Furthermore, BIRB796 targeting of p38 activities reduced expression of psoriasis-related genes in both human keratinocytes stimulated with recombinant IL-17A in vitro and psoriatic skin specimens ex vivo. CONCLUSION: Therefore our findings suggest that cutaneous p38 activation can be a key event in patients with psoriasis and a potential topical therapeutic target of a small molecule.


Subject(s)
Dermatitis/metabolism , Psoriasis/metabolism , p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/metabolism , Adult , Aged , Animals , Anisomycin/pharmacology , Dermatitis/immunology , Enzyme Activation/drug effects , Enzyme Activation/physiology , Enzyme Activators/pharmacology , Female , Humans , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Middle Aged , Psoriasis/immunology , Skin/metabolism , Young Adult , p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/immunology
18.
J Allergy Clin Immunol ; 144(1): 144-156, 2019 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30685456

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Atopic dermatitis (AD) shows differential clinical presentation in older compared with younger patients. Nevertheless, changes in the AD molecular profile with age are unknown. OBJECTIVE: We sought to characterize age-related changes in the AD profile. METHODS: We evaluated age-specific changes in lesional and nonlesional tissues and blood from patients with moderate-to-severe AD (n = 246) and age-matched control subjects (n = 71) using immunohistochemistry, quantitative real-time PCR, and Singulex in a cross-sectional study. Patients were analyzed by age group (18-40, 41-60, and ≥61 years). RESULTS: Although disease severity/SCORAD scores were similar across AD age groups (mean, approximately 60 years; P = .873), dendritic cell infiltrates (CD1b+ and FcεRI+, P < .05) decreased with age. TH2 measures (IL5, IL13, CCL13, CCL18, and CCL26) significantly decreased with age in patients with AD, despite increasing with age in control subjects. Consistent with TH2 axis decreases, serum IgE levels and eosinophil counts negatively correlated with age in patients with AD (r = -0.24 and r = -0.23, respectively; P < .05). TH22-secreted IL22 expression levels also decreased with age uniquely in patients with AD (P < .05). Expression of TH1-related (IFNG, IL12/23p40, STAT1, and CXCL9; P < .05 for CXCL9) and TH17-related (IL17A and IL20; P < .05 for IL20) markers increased with age in both patients with AD and control subjects. Expression of terminal differentiation measures significantly increased in older patients with AD (loricrin [LOR] and filaggrin [FLG], P < .05), whereas expression of S100As (S100A8, P < .01) and hyperplasia markers (epidermal thickness, keratin 16, and Ki67; P < .05 for keratin 16) decreased. Serum trends in AD mimicked skin findings, with TH2 downregulation (CCL26; r = -0.32, P < .1) and TH1 upregulation (IFN-γ; r = 0.48, P < .01) with age. CONCLUSION: The adult AD profile varies with age. Although TH1/TH17 skewing increases in both patients with AD and control subjects, patients with AD show unique decreases in TH2/TH22 polarization and normalization of epithelial abnormalities. Thus age-specific treatment approaches might be beneficial for AD.


Subject(s)
Aging , Dermatitis, Atopic , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Aging/blood , Aging/genetics , Aging/immunology , Cytokines/genetics , Cytokines/immunology , Dermatitis, Atopic/blood , Dermatitis, Atopic/genetics , Dermatitis, Atopic/immunology , Dermatitis, Atopic/pathology , Female , Filaggrin Proteins , Gene Expression , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Phenotype , Severity of Illness Index , Skin/immunology , Skin/pathology , Young Adult
19.
J Allergy Clin Immunol ; 143(6): 2158-2169, 2019 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30578873

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: IL-23 contributes to the activation, maintenance, and proliferation of TH17 cells and plays a major role in psoriasis pathophysiology. IL-23p19 inhibition with risankizumab resulted in superior clinical responses in patients with psoriasis compared with ustekinumab (dual IL-12/IL-23 inhibitor), but comparative molecular effects have not been established. OBJECTIVE: We investigated the similarities and differences in molecular and histopathologic profiles in skin lesions from patients with psoriasis receiving risankizumab versus ustekinumab at an early time point. METHODS: Lesional skin biopsy samples from 81 patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis participating in 2 different studies (a phase I risankizumab study and a phase II study of risankizumab vs ustekinumab) were analyzed by using histopathology, immunohistochemistry, and RNA sequencing. RESULTS: Risankizumab induced a rapid decrease in levels of proteins and transcriptomic biomarkers associated with the IL-23 pathway, which were maintained through 8 weeks. At week 4, risankizumab decreased histopathologic expression of biomarkers, including K16, Ki67, CD3, lipocalin-2, CD11c, dendritic cell lysosome-associated membrane glycoprotein, ß-defensin 2, and S100A7; global histopathologic scoring revealed that 54% and 69% of patients treated with 90 or 180 mg of risankizumab, respectively, were graded as experiencing "excellent improvement" versus 29% of patients treated with ustekinumab. At week 4, there was a common decrease in expression of 2645 genes expressed in lesional skin between patients receiving risankizumab and ustekinumab and a significant decrease in 2682 genes unique to risankizumab treatment. Risankizumab more strongly downregulated expression of genes associated with keratinocytes, epidermal cells, and monocytes, versus ustekinumab. CONCLUSION: Risankizumab demonstrated more pronounced changes in the molecular and histopathologic profile of psoriatic skin lesions compared with ustekinumab at week 4.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal/therapeutic use , Psoriasis/drug therapy , Skin/pathology , Th17 Cells/immunology , Ustekinumab/therapeutic use , Adult , Biopsy , CD3 Complex/metabolism , Down-Regulation , Female , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Interleukin-12/antagonists & inhibitors , Interleukin-23 Subunit p19/antagonists & inhibitors , Ki-67 Antigen/metabolism , Lipocalin-2/metabolism , Lymphocyte Activation , Male , Middle Aged , Psoriasis/pathology , Sequence Analysis, RNA , Skin/drug effects , Skin/metabolism , Treatment Outcome
20.
J Allergy Clin Immunol ; 143(1): 142-154, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30121291

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: IL-22 is potentially a pathogenic cytokine in patients with atopic dermatitis (AD), but the molecular effects of IL-22 antagonism have not been defined in human subjects. OBJECTIVE: We sought to evaluate the cellular and molecular effects of IL-22 blockade in tissues from patients with moderate-to-severe AD. METHODS: We assessed lesional and nonlesional skin from 59 patients with moderate-to-severe AD treated with anti-IL-22 (fezakinumab) versus placebo (2:1) using transcriptomic and immunohistochemistry analyses. RESULTS: Greater reversal of the AD genomic profile was seen with fezakinumab versus placebo, namely 25.3% versus 10.5% at 4 weeks (P = 1.7 × 10-5) and 65.5% versus 13.9% at 12 weeks (P = 9.5 × 10-19), respectively. Because IL-22 blockade showed clinical efficacy only in patients with severe AD, we used baseline median IL-22 mRNA expression to stratify for high (n = 30) and low (n = 29) IL-22 expression groups. Much stronger mean transcriptomic improvements were seen with fezakinumab in the IL-22-high drug-treated group (82.8% and 139.4% at 4 and 12 weeks, respectively) than in the respective IL-22-high placebo-treated group (39.6% and 56.3% at 4 and 12 weeks) or the IL-22-low groups. Significant downregulations of multiple immune pathways, including TH1/CXCL9, TH2/CCL18/CCL22, TH17/CCL20/DEFB4A, and TH22/IL22/S100A's, were restricted to the IL-22-high drug group (P < .05). Consistently, tissue predictors of clinical response were mostly genes involved in T-cell and dendritic cell activation and differentiation. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first report showing a profound effect of IL-22 blockade on multiple inflammatory pathways in AD. These data, supported by robust effects in patients with high IL-22 baseline expression, suggest a central role for IL-22 in AD, indicating the need for a precision medicine approach for improving therapeutic outcomes in patients with AD.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal/administration & dosage , Dermatitis, Atopic/drug therapy , Gene Expression Regulation/drug effects , Interleukins/biosynthesis , Skin/metabolism , Adult , Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized , Dermatitis, Atopic/immunology , Dermatitis, Atopic/metabolism , Dermatitis, Atopic/pathology , Female , Gene Expression Regulation/immunology , Humans , Interleukins/immunology , Male , Middle Aged , Skin/immunology , Skin/pathology , Th1 Cells/immunology , Th1 Cells/metabolism , Th1 Cells/pathology , Th17 Cells/immunology , Th17 Cells/metabolism , Th17 Cells/pathology , Th2 Cells/immunology , Th2 Cells/metabolism , Th2 Cells/pathology , Interleukin-22
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