| Literature DB >> 31118733 |
M Galluzzo1, S D'Adamio1, A Massaro1, A Piccolo1, L Bianchi1, M Talamonti1.
Abstract
The IL-17/IL-23 axis is now understood to influence psoriasis, and the development of novel IL-17 inhibitor medications marks a sea change in the treatment of psoriasis. Brodalumab is a recombinant, fully human immunoglobulin IgG2 monoclonal antibody specifically targeted against IL-17RA. This article discusses the mechanism of action and the efficacy and safety profile of brodalumab presented in the literature. Brodalumab, the latest approved anti-IL-17-class medication, is the only one that exerts its effects on IL-17C as well as on IL-17A and IL-17F, blocking the shared IL-17 receptor A. In this sense, considering the recent evidence, brodalumab could have beneficial effects not only on psoriasis, but also on atopic dermatitis. It could also serve as a therapeutic alternative in patients who develop paradoxical eczematous reactions or atopic-like dermatitis during treatment with other anti-IL-17A (secukinumab, ixekizumab).Entities:
Keywords: PASI100; anti-IL17RA; atopic dermatitis; biologics; brodalumab; psoriasis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31118733 PMCID: PMC6503649 DOI: 10.2147/CCID.S165605
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol ISSN: 1178-7015
Comparing week 12 AMAGINE 2 and AMAGINE 3 PASI 75, 90 and 100 results with extension study (week 52 and week 108 results are obtained from patients assuming brodalumab 210 mg Q2W during the maintenance and long-term extension phases)
| Week 12 | Week 12 | Week 52 | Week 108 |
|---|---|---|---|
66,6 % for brodalumab 140 mg group 86,3 % for brodalumab 210 mg group 70 % for ustekinumab group and 8,1 % for placebo group | 69,2 % for brodalumab 140 mg group 85,1 % for brodalumab 210 mg group 69,3 % for ustekinumab group and 6 % for placebo group | 93,1 % for brodalumab 210 mg group | 91,0% for brodalumab 210 mg group |
86,4% for brodalumab 210 mg group | 79,7% for | ||
25,7 % for brodalumab 140 mg group 44,4 % for brodalumab 210 mg group 21,7 % for ustekinumab group, and 0,6 % for placebo group | 27 % for brodalumab 140 mg group 36,7 % for brodalumab 210 mg group 18,5 % for ustekinumab group and 0,3 % for placebo group | 66,5 % for brodalumab 210 mg group | 61,9 % for |
Notes: Data from Lebwohl M et al18 and Papp KA et al.28
Safety data from AMAGINE-2 and AMAGINE-3 trials
| Study protocols | Most common AE | Severe AEs |
|---|---|---|
| Study protocols | Most common AEs (rates per 100 patient-over 2.3 years) | Severe AEs |
| N=1800 patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis | Injection site reaction (4.5%) Candida infections (4.1%) Nasopharyngitis (3%) | 4 patients committed suicide Neutropenia (0.2 for AMAGINE-2 and 1.5 for AMAGINE-3) Sepsis (0.1) , (0.1) |
| N=1800 patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis | Respiratory tract infection (1.8%) Arthralgias (1.1%) Depressed mood (1.5%) | MACE (0.2) , (0.7) Serious infection (1.4%) |
Figure 1IL-17A and IL-17C are involved in a mutual relationship wherein IL-17A strongly induces IL-17C in keratinocytes and IL-17C is capable of synthesizing IL-17A in T lymphocytes. IL-17C may also play a role in other skin inflammatory diseases; inhibiting IL-17C may therefore be beneficial in both psoriasis and AD patients: antibody-dependent blockade of IL-17C inhibited cutaneous inflammation in the IL-23-induced psoriasis model and even in AD-like inflammation in mice.
Abbreviations: AD, atopic dermatitis; DC, dendritic cell; IL, interleukin; Th, lymphocyte T helper.