Conference Coverage

Ixekizumab Normalizes Mutant Psoriasis Genes


 

AT THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SOCIETY FOR INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY

RALEIGH, N.C. – At 2 weeks after psoriasis patients received their first dose of the investigational interleukin-17 inhibitor ixekizumab, their gene expression pattern resembled that of healthy controls.

At the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology, Dr. James G. Krueger presented a translational medicine study aimed at defining the impact that turning off IL-17 signaling has on pathological tissue structures, molecular pathways, and biomarkers.

Dr. James G. Krueger

His conclusion: "I think these data suggest IL-17 is the central cytokine driving pathogenesis in psoriasis," said Dr. Krueger of Rockefeller University in New York.

Eight psoriasis patients received a subcutaneous 150-mg dose of ixekizumab at weeks 0, 2, and 4 and underwent skin biopsies at weeks 0, 2, and 6. He compared their inflammatory gene expression profiles 2 weeks into treatment vs. those obtained from 15 psoriasis patients 2 weeks after beginning treatment with etanercept (at 50 mg twice weekly for 12 weeks).

IL-17 blockade with ixekizumab proved to have a greater impact on the expression of inflammatory genes known to be associated with psoriasis than did tumor necrosis factor inhibition via etanercept. Ixekizumab resulted in greater-than-75% normalization of expression of 643 of these inflammatory genes, compared with 104 with etanercept.

The structural result of IL-17 blockade was reversal by week 6 of the epidermal hyperplasia that is the hallmark of psoriasis, he added.

Two of the eight patients on the ixekizumab 150-mg regimen achieved PASI 75 (that is, a 75% improvement from baseline on the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index) in 2 weeks. That’s remarkably fast improvement, Dr. Krueger noted. By week 6, all eight patients had achieved PASI 75.

Another point in favor of IL-17’s being a central cytokine driving psoriasis is that ixekizumab shut down not only the IL-17A target genes downstream, but also genes controlling the production of key cytokines located upstream, including interferon-gamma and IL-22, he noted.

Phase III trials investigating ixekizumab for psoriasis are underway. The drug is also being investigated for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and ankylosing spondylitis.

Dr. Krueger is a consultant to Eli Lilly, which funded the study and is developing ixekizumab as a treatment for psoriasis.

Recommended Reading

ACR Gives Special Consideration to Pregnancy in Nephritis Guidelines
MDedge Family Medicine
Running, Aerobics May Protect Women Against Psoriasis
MDedge Family Medicine
Gene Shields Psoriasis Patients from Heart Disease
MDedge Family Medicine
Psoriasis Boosts Crohn's Risk Fourfold
MDedge Family Medicine
High-Dose Ustekinumab Stomps Out Palmoplantar Psoriasis
MDedge Family Medicine
Ustekinumab Beats Placebo for Psoriatic Arthritis
MDedge Family Medicine
Weight Contributes to Anti-TNF Response in PsA
MDedge Family Medicine
Rosuvastatin Lessened Endothelial Dysfunction in SSc
MDedge Family Medicine
Stem Cell Transplant Boosts Survival in Scleroderma
MDedge Family Medicine
Certolizumab Eased Skin and Joint Symptoms in PsA
MDedge Family Medicine