| Literature DB >> 23259845 |
Naoki Iwamoto1, Oliver Distler1.
Abstract
Despite significant advances have been made in the recent years regarding organ-specific therapies, there is no approved 'disease-modifying' antifibrotic drug for systemic sclerosis (SSc) available to date. Although non-selective immunosuppressive agents are routinely used to treat patients with SSc, large well-controlled studies are lacking for almost all immunosuppressive agents and further evidence is required for long-term beneficial effects of these drugs. Considering these facts about immunosuppressive agents in SSc and also considering the high mortality of SSc, other therapeutic strategies are urgently needed. Recently an important role of the 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT: serotonin) pathway in fibrosis was reported. In this review, we discuss the role of 5-HT in fibrosis and therapeutic potential of this molecule. Besides 5-HT, there are a number of promising targets that have been extensively characterized in recent years. For many of these molecular targets, modifiers are readily available for clinical studies, and often these modifiers are used already in clinical use for other diseases. Results from these studies will show, in how far the promising preclinical results for novel antifibrotic strategies can be translated to clinical practice.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23259845 PMCID: PMC3368787 DOI: 10.1186/1755-1536-5-S1-S19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fibrogenesis Tissue Repair ISSN: 1755-1536
Randomized controlled trials evaluating immunosuppressive/immunomodulatory drugs in patients with SSc.
| Reference | Treatment | Number and main inclusion criteria of SSc patients | Study duration | Clinical effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Furst DE et al. | Chlorambucil p.o. 0.05-0.1 mg/kg/day versus placebo | 65 SSc | 3 years | NS effect |
| O'Dell JR et al. J Rheumatol | Total lymphoid irradiation versus untreated control | 6 SSc with internal organ involvement | Follow-up of 1-4 years | NS effect |
| Casaes JA et al. | 5-fluorouracil i.v. 4 × 12 mg/kg daily, followed by 4 × 6 mg/kg every two days and maintenance therapy with 12.5 mg/kg weekly versus placebo | 70 SSc (diffuse or limited with visceral involvement) | 6 months | Significant improvement in skin score, Raynaud's score and patient's general assesment scores |
| Sharada B et al. | Dexamethasone i.v. 100 mg/month versus placebo | 35 diffuse SSc | 6 months | Significant improvement in skin score |
| Van den Hoogen FH et al. | Methotrexate i.m. 15 mg/week versus placebo | 29 SSc with <3 years of skin involvement or with disease progression | 24 weeks | Trend towards improvement in skin score (p = 0.06 in comparison with placebo) |
| Clements PJ et al. Arthritis Rheum | D-penicillamine p.o. high (750-1000 mg/d) versus low (125 mg every second day) dose | 134 early diffuse SSc | 2 years | NS effect |
| Pope JE et al. | Methotrexate p.o. 15 mg/week versus placebo | 71 early diffuse SSc | 1 year | Improvement in skin scores, borderline significance |
| Tashkin DP et al. N Eng J Med | Cyclophosphamide p.o. 1-2 mg/kg/d versus placebo | 154 SSc with early (<7 years duration) SSc, symptomatic SLD and alveolitis | 1 year | Significant improvement in lung volumes, dyspnoea and some measures of health related quality of life. |
| Hoyles Rk et al. | Cyclophosphamide 6 × i.v. 600 mg/m2/month plus oral predonisone 20 mg every second day followed by azathioprine (p.o. 2.5 mg/kg/day) versus placebo | 45 SSc with SLD | 1 year | Trend towards improvement of FVC (p = 0.08), but low power |
| Nadashkevich O et al. | Cyclophosphamide p.o. 2 mg/kg/d for 12 months, then 1 mg/kg/d for another 6 months versus asathioprine 2.5 mg/kg/d for 12 months and then 2 mg/kg/d for 18 months | 60 early diffuse SSc (<12 months duration) | 18 months | Significant improvement in skin score, lung function tests and frequency of attacks of Raynaud's phenomenon |
i.v. = intravenous, i.m. = intramuscular, p.o. = peroral, NS = not significant, SLD = scleroderma interstitial lung diseases, SSc = systemic sclerosis. This list is not complete and is only a selection of potential molecules for targeted therapies. Modified from Distler O: Screloderma-modern aspects of pathogenesis, diagnosis and therapy. UNI-MED 2009.
Possible molecular targets for therapy in SSc
| Target molecules | Available drug name | References |
|---|---|---|
| Tyrosine kinases | Imatinib, Nilotinib, Dasatinib | Iwamoto N et al. |
| SRC kinases | SU6656, Dasatinib | Akhmetshina A et al. |
| TGF-b inhibitors | Several drugs | Asano Y. |
| Histondeacetylase inhibitor | Trichostatin, SAHA | Huber LC et al. |
| DNA Methyltransferase inhibitors | 5-AZA | Wang Y et al. |
| Rho associated kinase | Fasudil | Akhmetshina A et al. |
| Cannabinoid receptor 2 (CB2) agonists | Several drugs | Akhmetshina A et al. |
| PPAR γ agonists | None | Wei J et al. |
| Adenosine A2A receptor blockers | None | Chan ES et al. |
| IL-13 inhibitors | None | Lafyatis R et al. |
| Serotonin-Receptor-2B inhibitors | Terguride | Dees C et al. |
| CTGF inhibitor | CTGF antibodies | Wang Q et al. |
| IL-6 receptor antagonist | Tocilizmab | Shima Y et al. |
| MicroRNA-29a | None | Maurer B et al. |
| Fos-Related Antigen-2 (AP-1 family) | None | Reich N et al. |