| Literature DB >> 31893355 |
Amanda Kvist-Hansen1, Peter Riis Hansen2, Lone Skov3.
Abstract
Psoriasis is a prevalent chronic inflammatory disease. The inflammatory response is driven by T cells and mediated by multiple cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor and the interleukins IL-17 and IL-23. Moderate-to-severe psoriasis is treated systemically, using either biologics or conventional treatments with small-molecule drugs. The newer biologics are very effective and well tolerated, but not all patients respond to treatment with biologics, so there is a need for new treatment options for psoriasis. Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors are a new drug class that may be of use in this respect. These inhibitors are already on the market for rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and ulcerative colitis. They block the intracellular signal pathway mediated by JAK and signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) proteins, thereby inhibiting gene transcription of proinflammatory cytokines. JAK inhibitors are currently being tested as potential treatments for psoriasis. They have shown clinical efficacy as measured by the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index 75 response in both phase 2 and 3 trials, and appear to be well tolerated overall. This review provides an overview of the mechanisms underlying the actions of JAK inhibitors in psoriasis, together with the results of clinical trials testing their efficacies when used to treat the disease.Entities:
Keywords: Efficacy; JAK inhibitors; JAK-STAT signaling pathway; Psoriasis; TYK2 inhibitors; Tofacitinib; Treatment
Year: 2019 PMID: 31893355 PMCID: PMC6994544 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-019-00347-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Fig. 1Overview of the interleukin (IL)-23 signal pathway and the mechanism of tyrosine kinase (TYK) 2 inhibition. The IL-23 signal pathway is implicated in the pathogenesis of psoriasis and is an example of a signal pathway that is mediated by Janus kinases (JAKS) and signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) proteins. There are four JAKs: JAK1, JAK2, JAK3, and TYK2. When IL-23 binds to the IL-23 receptor (R), it attracts a heterodimer of JAK2 and TYK2 that binds to the intracellular domain of the receptor. JAK2 and TYK2 then autophosphorylate (P), which activates the receptor and attracts STAT proteins. The STAT proteins bind and are phosphorylated before dimerizing and translocating to the cell nucleus, where they regulate gene transcription and thus further cytokine production. TYK2 inhibitors inhibit TYK2 function, which in turn suppresses intracellular signal transduction downstream of the receptor and thus further cytokine production through IL-23 during the psoriatic inflammation process
Outline of tofacitinib studies
| Study/research ID | Research phase and status | Description | Primary end point | Key results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Papp et al. (2012) NCT00678210 [ | 2b Complete | 197 patients were randomized to 2 mg, 5 mg, 15 mg, or placebo twice daily for 12 weeks | PASI75 | PASI75 response rates at week 12 were significantly higher for all tofacitinib groups vs. placebo PASI75: 25.0% (2 mg), 40.8% (5 mg), 66.7% (15 mg), 2% (placebo) |
Papp et al. (2015) NCT01276639 NCT01309737 [ | 3 Complete | 901 and 960 (in two parallel studies) were randomized to 5 mg, 10 mg, or placebo twice daily for 16 weeks | PASI75 PGA (0 or 1) | For both studies, PGA (0 or 1) and PASI75 response rates at week 16 were significantly higher for each dose compared to placebo PGA (0 or 1) Study 1: 41.9% (5 mg), 59.2% (10 mg), 9.0% (placebo) Study 2: 46.0% (5 mg), 59.1% (10 mg), 10.9% (placebo) PASI75 Study 1: 39.9% (5 mg), 59.2% (10 mg), 6.2% (placebo) Study 2: 46.0% (5 mg), 59.6% (10 mg), 11.4% (placebo) |
Bachelez et al. (2015) NCT01241591 [ | 3 Complete | 1106 patients randomized to 5 mg, 10 mg, or placebo twice daily or etanercept 50 mg subcutaneously twice a week for 12 weeks | PASI75 PGA (0 or 1) | PASI75 and PGA (0 or 1) response rates at week 12 were significantly higher for tofacitinib and etanercept compared to placebo Tofacitinib 10 mg twice daily was noninferior to etanercept and superior to placebo PASI75: 39.5% (5 mg), 63.6% (10 mg), 58.8% (etanercept), 5.6% (placebo) PGA (0 or 1) 47.1% (5 mg), 68.2% (10 mg), 66.3% (etanercept), 15.0% (placebo) |
Bissonnette et al. (2015) NCT01186744 [ | 3 Complete | Withdrawal and retreatment study Initial phase included 666 patients randomized to 5 mg or 10 mg twice daily for 24 weeks In the withdrawal phase, 291 patients continued and were randomized to either continued active treatment (5 mg or 10 mg) or placebo twice daily for up to 16 weeks 264 patients continued to the retreatment phase and were retreated with the same dose of 5 mg or 10 mg twice daily as they had received in the initial phase. The study ended at week 54 | Treatment withdrawal PASI75 PGA (0 or 1) Retreatment PASI75 PGA (0 or 1) | Initial phase: PASI75 response at week 24 43.8% (5 mg) and 67.6% (10 mg) PGA (0 or 1) response 41.6% (5 mg) and 62.8% (10 mg) 33.5% (5 mg) and 55.2% (10 mg) of patients achieved a PASI 75 and a PGA response, respectively, and continued to the withdrawal phase Withdrawal phase: A greater proportion of the patients continuing treatment maintained a PASI75 response than those who switched to placebo after 16 weeks. At week 16; 92.3% (5 mg) and 93.0% (10 mg) did not relapse, as compared to 32.8% (placebo, 5 mg in the initial phase) and 42.9% (placebo, 10 mg in the initial phase) Retreatment phase: Of patients treated with placebo in the withdrawal phase, 48.0/52.0% (5 mg retreatment) and 72.5/64.2% (10 mg retreatment) regained or maintained a PASI75/PGA response after 16 weeks of retreatment Of patients that relapsed on placebo in the withdrawal phase, 36.8% (5 mg) and 61.0% (10 mg) achieved a PASI75 response after 16 weeks of retreatment, while 44.8% (5 mg) and 57.1% (10 mg) of those who lost a PGA response achieved a PGA response upon retreatment |
Zhang et al. (2017) NCT01815424 [ | 3 Complete | 266 Asian patients were randomized to 5 mg, 10 mg, or placebo twice daily for 16 weeks. The active treatment groups were then followed up for 36 weeks | PASI75 PGA (0 or 1) | PASI75 and PGA (0 or 1) response rates at week 16 were significantly higher for tofacitinib groups compared to placebo PASI75: 54.3% (5 mg), 81.1% (10 mg), 12.5% (placebo) PGA (0–1): 52.3% (5 mg), 75.6% (10 mg), 19.3% (placebo) Both PASI75 and PGA responses were generally sustained during the 36 weeks of follow-up |
Outline of TYK2 inhibitor studies
| Study/drug/research ID | Research phase and status | Description | Key results |
|---|---|---|---|
Papp et al. (2018) BMS-986165 NCT02931838 [ | 2 Complete | 267 patients randomized to 3 mg every other day, 3 mg daily, 3 mg twice daily, 6 mg twice daily, 12 mg daily, or placebo for 12 weeks | All groups receiving the study drug (except the 3 mg every other day group) had a significantly greater PASI75 response at week 12 compared to placebo PASI75: 9% (3 mg every other day), 39% (3 mg daily) 69% (3 mg twice daily), 67% (6 mg twice daily), 75% (12 mg daily), 7% (placebo) |
BMS-986165 NCT04036435 [ | 3 Not recruiting yet | Safety and efficacy study | – |
BMS-986165 NCT03924427 [ | 3 Recruiting | Safety and efficacy evaluation in Japanese patients | – |
BMS-986165 NCT03611751 NCT03624127 [ | 3 Recruiting | Two parallel studies of efficacy compared to apremilast and placebo | – |
PF06826647 NCT03895372 [ | 2 Recruiting | Safety and efficacy study | – |
Outline of other JAK inhibitor studies
| Study/drug/research ID | Research phase and status | Description | Primary end point | Key results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Papp et al. (2015) ASP015K NCT01096862 [ | 2a Complete | 124 patients were randomized to 10 mg twice daily, 25 mg twice daily, 60 mg twice daily, 100 mg twice daily, 50 mg once daily, or placebo for 6 weeks | Mean PASI reduction from baseline | All treatment groups showed significant improvements in PASI compared to placebo Dose-dependent effect observed Mean change in PASI from baseline: − 6.4 (10 mg twice daily), − 6.5 (25 mg twice daily), − 8.3 (60 mg twice daily), − 11.9 (100 mg twice daily), − 6.6 (50 mg once daily), − 4.2 (placebo) |
Ludbrook et al. (2016) GSK2586184 NCT01782664 [ | 2a Complete | 60 patients were randomized to 100 mg, 200 mg, 400 mg, or placebo twice daily for 12 weeks | PASI75 | PASI 75 response rate at week 12 for the 400 mg group was significantly different from that of the placebo group. Dose-dependent improvements in PASI75 described: 13% (100 mg), 25% (200 mg), 57% (400 mg), 0% (placebo) |
Papp et al. (2016) Baricitinib NCT01490632 [ | 2b Complete | 238 North American patients were randomized to 2 mg, 4 mg, 8 mg, 10 mg once daily, or placebo for 12 weeks | PASI75 | PASI75 response at week 12 was only significantly different for the 8 mg group (43%) and the 10 mg group (54%) compared to placebo (17%) |
Bissonnette et al. (2016) INCB039110 NCT01634087 [ | 2 Complete | 50 patients were randomized to 100 mg daily, 200 mg daily, 200 mg twice daily, 600 mg daily, or placebo for 28 days | Mean PGA reduction from baseline | A significant improvement in mean percent reduction in PGA from baseline was observed for the 200 mg twice daily and 600 mg daily groups compared to placebo Mean PGA reduction from baseline: 22.2% (100 mg daily), 29.4% (200 mg daily), 35.2% (200 mg twice daily), 42.4% (600 mg daily), 12.5% (placebo) |
| Psoriasis is a prevalent chronic inflammatory disease. The inflammatory response is driven by T cells and mediated by multiple cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and the interleukins IL-17 and IL-23. |
| Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors are a potential new systemic treatment option for psoriasis. |
| JAK inhibitors block the production of proinflammatory cytokines in psoriasis by inhibiting the JAK–signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) signaling pathway downstream of the receptor. |
| Different JAK inhibitors have been and are currently being tested in phase 2 and 3 clinical trials as treatments for moderate-to-severe psoriasis. |
| The results of these trials have demonstrated the clinical efficacy of JAK inhibitors in psoriasis as measured by PASI75, and have shown that they have a safety profile comparable to biologics already on the market. However, these results are based on short-term use, and more studies are needed to determine the long-term efficacy and safety of JAK inhibitors in psoriasis. |