| Literature DB >> 31275298 |
Kaisa Tasanen1, Outi Varpuluoma1, Wataru Nishie2.
Abstract
Bullous pemphigoid (BP) is an organ-specific autoantibody-mediated blistering skin disease that mainly affects the elderly. Typical clinical features include the widespread blisters, often preceded by and/or associated with itchy urticarial or eczema-like lesions. BP patients have circulating autoantibodies against BP180 and/or the plakin family protein BP230 both of which are components of hemidesmosomes in basal keratinocytes. Most BP autoantibodies particularly target the epitopes within the non-collagenous NC16A domain of BP180. Clinical findings and murine models of BP have provided evidence of a pathogenic role of anti-NC16A autoantibodies. However, it is largely unknown what triggers the breakage of immunotolerance against BP180 in elderly individuals. The incidence of BP has been increased over the past two decades in several countries. Aside from aging populations, the factors behind this phenomenon are still not fully understood. Neurodegenerative diseases such as multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, and certain dementias are independent risk factors for BP. Recently several case reports have described BP in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) patients who have been treated with dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors (DPP-4i or gliptins), which are a widely used class of anti-DM drugs. The association between the use of DPP-4is, particularly vildagliptin, and BP risk has been confirmed by several epidemiological studies. Evidence suggests that cases of gliptin-associated BP in Japan display certain features that set them apart from cases of "regular" BP. These include a "non-inflammatory" phenotype, targeting by antibodies of different immunodominant BP180 epitopes, and a specific association with the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) types. However, recent studies in European populations have found no major differences between the clinical and immunological characteristics of gliptin-associated BP and "regular" BP. The DPP-4 protein (also known as CD26) is ubiquitously expressed and has multiple functions in various cell types. The different effects of the inhibition of DPP-4/CD26 activity include, for example, tissue modeling and regulation of inflammatory cells such as T lymphocytes. Although the pathomechanism of gliptin-associated BP is currently largely unknown, investigation of the unique effect of gliptins in the induction of BP may provide a novel route to better understanding of how immunotolerance against BP180 breaks down in BP.Entities:
Keywords: BP180; CD26; DPP4; bullous pemphigoid; collagen XVII; diabetes mellitus; gliptins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31275298 PMCID: PMC6593303 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Figure 1(A) Typical BP patient who had widespread itchy urticarial and erythematous lesions and tense blisters. (B) The histopathological analysis of lesional skin samples shows subepidermal blisters with numerous eosinophilic infiltrates. (C) Direct IF of a peri-blistering lesion reveals the linear deposition of IgG at the dermo-epidermal junction (arrows). (D) Indirect IF detects circulating IgG autoantibodies directing the dermo-epidermal junction of normal salt-split human skin. The IgG reacts with the roof epidermis of an artificial blister (star). This figure has been previously published in the following paper: Nishie (1). New diagnostic tool for bullous pemphigoid: full-length BP180 ELISA.
Figure 2(A) Schematic presentation of molecules that make up the dermo-epidermal junction. (B) The structure of BP180. Note that the NC16A domain (arrow) is the juxtamembranous extracellular domain. This figure has been previously published in the following paper: Nishie (4). Update on the pathogenesis of bullous pemphigoid: an autoantibody-mediated blistering disease targeting collagen XVII.
Selected case reports of gliptin-associated bullous pemphigoid.
| Pasmatzi et al. ( | 2 | Vildagliptin (2) | 2 months |
| Skandalis et al. ( | 6 | Vildagliptin (5), sitaglitpin (1) | 2–13 months |
| Aouidad et al. ( | 3 | Vildagliptin (1), sitagliptin (2) | 5–6 months |
| Attaway et al. ( | 1 | Sitagliptin (1) | 12 months |
| Bene et al. ( | 3 | Vildagliptin (3) | 1–37 months |
| Mendonça et al. ( | 3 | Vildaglitpin (2), linagliptin (1) | 45 days−3 months |
| García et al. ( | 1 | Vildagliptin | 12 months |
| Haber et al. ( | 2 | Linagliptin (2) | 3–4 months |
| Sakai et al. ( | 1 | Linagliptin (1) | 9 months |
| Esposito et al. ( | 1 | Linagliptin (1) | 5 months |
| Yoshiji et al. ( | 5 | Vildaglitpin (1), linagliptin (2), sitagliptin (1), anagliptin (1) | 1–15 months |
| Harada et al. ( | 1 | Sitagliptin (1) | 3 years |
| Oya et al. ( | 1 | Anagliptin (1) | 1 month |
| Schaffer et al. ( | 9 | Vildagliptin (4), sitagliptin (5) | 5–48 months |
| Fania et al. ( | 5 | Vildagliptin (1), sitagliptin (1), linagliptin (2), alogliptin (1) | 1–8 months |
| Lindgren et al. ( | 10 | Vildagliptin (4), sitagliptin (5), linagliptin (1) | 5–24 months |
Epidemiological studies of gliptin-associated bullous pemphigoid.
| Schaffer et al. ( | Switzerland | Hospital data | 23 (DM+BP)/170(DM) | 77.6 | DPP-4i: 2.48 (95% CI 0.75–8.3) |
| Benzaquen et al. ( | France | Hospital data (3 hospitals) | 61 (BP+DM)/122(DM) | 79.1 | DPP-4i: 2.64 (95% CI 1.19–5.85) |
| Varpuluoma et al. ( | Finland | Nationwide registry data | 3397/12941 | 76.6 | DPP-4i: 2.19 (95% CI 1.55–3.11) |
| Kawaguchi et al. ( | Japan | Hospital data | 168 cases: DPP4i-BP 32 non-DPP4i-BP 136 | 79.7 | NA |
| Kridin and Bergman ( | Israel | Hospital data | 82 (BP+DM)/328 (DM) | 79.1 | DPP-4i: 3.16 (95% CI 1.86–5.37) |
| Plaquevent et al. ( | France | Hospital data (21 hospitals). general population from reimbursement register | 1787/225412 | 77.9 | NA |
| Lee et al. ( | Korea | Insurance data, nationwide | 670 (BP+DM)/ | 75.3 | DPP-4i: 1.58 (95% CI 1.25–2.00) |
BP, Bullous pemphigoid; CI, Confidence interval; DM, Diabetes mellitus; DPP-4i, Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitor; OR, Odds ratio.
BP incidence 0.0859% of patients receiving DPP-4is.
Observed frequency of DPP-4is and vildagliptin compared to general population (6.0 vs. 3.6% and 3.3 vs. 0.7%).
Figure 3(A) A case of DPP4i-BP in a 70-year-old man without autoantibodies directed against the NC16A domain of BP180. The patient had IgG autoantibodies against the non-NC16A domains of BP180. Note that there is no erythema around the blisters. (B) The histopathological analysis of lesional skin shows subepidermal blisters with low number of infiltrating eosinophils.