| Literature DB >> 32638223 |
Joy Q Jin1, Jenny M Ahlstrom2, Nathan W Sweeney2, Wilson Liao3.
Abstract
Psoriasis is a skin condition that affects over 100 million people worldwide, while multiple myeloma (MM) accounts for 10% of all hematologic malignancies in the US. There has been limited research on the intersection of psoriasis and MM, and clinicians often face difficult decisions in treating patients diagnosed with both conditions. For instance, the management of psoriasis with systemic immunotherapies in MM patients can be challenging because of concern about immunosuppression and possible worsening of MM. Online crowdsourcing platforms have recently become innovative tools that can actively empower patients in scientific research by enabling the contribution of health data. One such platform, HealthTree®, helps MM patients find optimal myeloma treatments and has registered > 6000 patients, many of whom have uploaded medical records and genetic profiles. By taking advantage of patient health data available on HealthTree, researchers can gain a greater understanding of the clinical characteristics and treatment responses of patients diagnosed with psoriasis and MM. In this case series, we first report a psoriasis and MM patient treated with the IL-17 inhibitor ixekizumab who demonstrated a temporary, 2-month improvement in MM biomarkers (M-protein, kappa, and kappa:lambda ratio). We then report on the clinical characteristics of 18 patients with verified profiles on HealthTree indicating concurrent psoriasis and MM conditions. We surveyed gender, age, psoriasis type, psoriasis treatment history, myeloma type, myeloma genetic features, and myeloma association with bone damage, hypercalcemia, or osteopenia. Four patients were treated with systemic immunomodulators for psoriasis, with responses suggesting that these therapies did not worsen MM progression. Our results validate crowdsourcing as a way to assess patient demographics and treatment responses for use in dermatology research. We examine the demographics of patients diagnosed with psoriasis and MM and investigate the use of systemic immunomodulators for treatment of psoriasis in MM patients.Entities:
Keywords: Crowdsource; HealthTree; IL-17; Ixekizumab; Multiple myeloma; Patient empowerment; Psoriasis; Systemic therapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32638223 PMCID: PMC7367969 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-020-00416-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Fig. 1Myeloma markers for Patient 1. Standard myeloma prognostic laboratory tests, including M-protein, kappa free light chain (FLC), and kappa/lambda FLC ratio were tracked across the ixekizumab treatment start and end date. The double arrows indicate the period of ixekizumab treatment from September 2019 to December 2019
Psoriasis characteristics among survey respondents
| Gender | Age (years) | Physician confirmed | Age at onset | Type | Current BSA (%) | Maximum BSA (%) | Current treatment(s) | Prior treatment(s) | Psoriasis treatment improved MM | Psoriasis treatment worsened MM | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | |||||||||||
| Patient 2 | M | 47 | Yes | 45 | Unsure | < 1 | < 1 | Tacrolimus | Topical steroids | No | No |
| Patient 3 | M | 58 | Yes | Unsure | Unsure | < 1 | 1–5 | Ketoconazole | None | No | Unsure |
| Patient 4 | F | 64 | Yes | 62 | Inverse, Palm/Sole, Plaque | 1–5 | > 5 | UVB phototherapy | Topical steroids | Unsure | Unsure |
| Patient 5 | M | 64 | Yes | 20 | Unsure | < 1 | 1–5 | Topical steroids, SCT | Tar, topical steroids, UVB phototherapy | No | No |
| Patient 6 | |||||||||||
| Patient 7 | M | 69 | Yes | 25 | Palm/Sole | 1–5 | > 5 | Topical steroids | None | No | No |
| Patient 8 | M | 66 | Yes | 35 | Plaque | < 1 | 1–5 | None | Topical steroids | Unsure | Unsure |
| Patient 9 | F | 67 | Yes | 20 | Guttate | < 1 | 1–5 | Tar | Tar, ketoconazole | Unsure | Unsure |
| Patient 10 | |||||||||||
| Patient 11 | M | 61 | Yes | 36 | Plaque | 1–5 | > 5 | None | Topical steroids, tar, UVB phototherapy | Unsure | Unsure |
| Patient 12 | M | 68 | Yes | 40 | Plaque | 1–5 | > 5 | Topical steroids | Topical steroids | Yes | Unsure |
| Patient 13 | F | 70 | Yes | 45 | Palm/sole | < 1 | < 1 | Topical steroids | None | No | Unsure |
| Patient 14 | M | 48 | Yes | 12 | Plaque | < 1 | < 1 | None | Non-steroid topics, heliotherapy | No | No |
| Patient 15 | M | 65 | Yes | 37 | Plaque | < 1 | < 1 | None | Tar, topical steroids | No | Unsure |
| Patient 16 | |||||||||||
| Patient 17 | F | 55 | Yes | 12 | Plaque | < 1 | 1-5 | None | Tar | Unsure | Unsure |
| Patient 18 | M | 75 | Yes | 45 | Unsure | Unsure | Unsure | Topical steroids | Unsure | No | No |
Survey questions were sent to patients via HealthTree, a platform that allows patients to navigate myeloma over the lifetime of their disease. Rows highlighted in italics indicate the four patients who received systemic therapy for psoriasis treatment
BSA, body surface area
Myeloma characteristics among survey respondents
| Diagnosis | Age of diagnosis | MM type | Genetics (at diagnosis) | Genetics (current) | Bone damage | Hypercalcemia | Osteopenia | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | ||||||||
| Patient 2 | Smoldering | 45 | IgG kappa | Del(13q) Trisomy 3 Trisomy 5 Trisomy 11 CD138—3% | Unsure | No | No | No |
| Patient 3 | MGUS, MM | 56 | Unsure | Gain 1q21 Trisomy 9 CD138 60% | CD138—5% | No | No | Unsure |
| Patient 4 | MGUS, smoldering | 63 | IgM lambda | Trisomy 17 | Unsure | No | No | Yes |
| Patient 5 | Smoldering, MM | 61 | IgG kappa | Gain 1q21 Del(1p) Del(13q)/monosomy 13 | No | No | No | |
| Patient 6 | ||||||||
| Patient 7 | MM | 61 | IgG kappa | Unsure | Unsure | Yes | No | No |
| Patient 8 | Smoldering, MM | 62 | IgA kappa | Del(13q)/monosomy 13 Trisomy 15 Trisomy 9 Trisomy 7 | Unsure | No | No | No |
| Patient 9 | MM | 62 | Unsure | Del(13q)/monosomy 13 | Unsure | No | Yes | Yes |
| Patient 10 | ||||||||
| Patient 11 | MM | 58 | IgG kappa | 11;14 Cytoplasmic kappa—6% CD20 CD138—5% | Yes | No | No | |
| Patient 12 | MGUS, MM | 62 | IgG kappa | CD38 CD138 Cytoplasmic kappa | Unsure | No | No | Yes |
| Patient 13 | MM | 47 | IgA lambda | Del(17)—33% | Unsure | No | No | No |
| Patient 14 | MM | 45 | IgA lambda | Unsure | Unsure | Unsure | Unsure | Unsure |
| Patient 15 | Smoldering, MM | 63 | IgG kappa | Unsure | Yes | No | No | |
| Patient 16 | ||||||||
| Patient 17 | MM | 53 | Unsure | Del(17p) CD138 CD38 Cytoplasmic kappa—42% | None | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Patient 18 | MM | 69 | IgG kappa | Gain 1q21—30% | No | Yes | Unsure |
Survey questions were sent to patients via HealthTree, a platform that allows patients to navigate myeloma over the lifetime of their disease
| There has been limited research on the intersection of psoriasis and multiple myeloma (MM), and providers often face difficult decisions in treating patients diagnosed with both conditions |
| Interleukin-17 (IL-17) has been identified as a cytokine that promotes both psoriasis and MM; however, the use of IL-17 inhibitors in patients with MM has not been examined |
| By crowdsourcing patient health data using the HealthTree platform, we can gain a greater understanding of the clinical characteristics and treatment responses of patients diagnosed with both psoriasis and MM |
| We identified a patient with psoriasis and active MM who was treated with the IL-17 inhibitor ixekizumab and who then experienced a transient reduction in her MM serologic markers |
| To further study psoriasis and MM, we identified 18 patients on HealthTree, a MM crowdsourcing platform. We analyzed information on gender, age, psoriasis type and treatment history, myeloma type and genetic features, and myeloma association with bone damage, hypercalcemia, or osteopenia |
| Among the 18 subjects, 4 patients were treated with a systemic immunomodulator for psoriasis with no obvious worsening of MM progression |