| Literature DB >> 33092242 |
Alessia Pin1, Alessandra Tesser1, Serena Pastore1, Valentina Moressa1, Erica Valencic1, Anna Arbo2, Alessandra Maestro2, Alberto Tommasini1,3, Andrea Taddio1,3.
Abstract
Off-label use of medications is still a common practice in pediatric rheumatology. JAK inhibitors are authorized in adults in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis and ulcerative colitis. Although their use is not authorized yet in children, JAK inhibitors, based on their mechanism of action and on clinical experiences in small series, have been suggested to be useful in the treatment of pediatric interferon-mediated inflammation. Accordingly, an increased interferon score may help to identify those patients who might benefit of JAK inhibitors. We describe the clinical experience with JAK inhibitors in seven children affected with severe inflammatory conditions and we discuss the correlation between clinical features and transcriptomic data. Clinical improvements were recorded in all cases. A reduction of interferon signaling was recorded in three out of seven subjects at last follow-up, irrespectively from clinical improvements. Other signal pathways with significant differences between patients and controls included upregulation of DNA repair pathway and downregulation of extracellular collagen homeostasis. Two patients developed drug-related adverse events, which were considered serious in one case. In conclusion, JAK inhibitors may offer a valuable option for children with severe interferon-mediated inflammatory disorders reducing the interferon score as well as influencing other signal pathways that deserve future studies.Entities:
Keywords: Janus kinase inhibitors; interferon signature; juvenile idiopathic arthritis; juvenile systemic erythematosus lupus; juvenile systemic sclerosis; monogenic interferonopathies; off-label medications; pediatric rheumatology; transcriptomics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33092242 PMCID: PMC7590237 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21207767
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Characteristics of the patients and medications.
| Pt | Diagnosis and Symptoms | Medications | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Previous Medications | JAKinhib | Concomitant Medications | Adverse Events | ||
| #1 | Monogenic lupus (DNase2 deficiency) | Corticosteroids, methotrexate, mycophenolate, hydroxychloroquine, etanercept, anakinra, thalidomide, canakinumab, abatacept | Ruxolitinib | Corticosteroids, hydroxychloroquine, mepacrine, ambrisentan, tadalafil, iloprost, furosemide, cotrimoxazole | Worsening of lymphopenia |
| #2 | CANDLE | Cyclosporine, anakinra, IVIG, cyclophosphamide, azathioprine, infliximab, hydroxychloroquine, abatacept, hyperbaric oxygen | Tofacitinib | Atorvastatin, corticosteroids | Transient increase of gamma glutamyltransferase and dyslipidemia |
| #3 | COPA | Corticosteroids, mycophenolate, hydroxychloroquine, methotrexate | Baricitinib | Mycophenolate, corticosteroids | None |
| #4 | Polyarticular JIA | Corticosteroids, methotrexate, etanercept, tocilizumab | Tofacitinib | Methotrexate | None |
| #5 | Weber-Christian Panniculitis | Corticosteroids, mycophenolate, cyclosporine, anakinra | Baricitinib | Cyclosporine, cotrimoxazole | None |
| #6 | SLE | Corticosteroids, mycophenolate, hydroxychloroquine | Baricitinib | Mycophenolate, Hydroxychloroquine | None |
| #7 | Juvenile systemic sclerosis | Mycophenolate, corticosteroids, rituximab * | Tofacitinib | Mycophenolate, corticosteroids | None |
Pt, patient; CANDLE, chronic atypical neutrophilic dermatosis with lipodystrophy and elevated temperature; IVIG, intravenous immunoglobulins; BID, bidaily; JIA, juvenile idiopathic arthritis; TID, tridaily, SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; QD, once a day. * The baseline sample considered in the later RNAseq analysis was collected before starting any pharmacological treatment (medication-naive), in contrast to the other patients.
Patient #1 laboratory findings.
| Pt#1 | ESR mm/h | IS | CRP mg/L | WBC/μL | HB g/dL | PLT/μL | IgG mg/dL | IgA mg/dL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before JAKinhibs | 9 | 83 | 9.9 | 3350 | 12.7 | 107,000 | 855 | 124 |
| After JAKinhibs | 13 | 62 | 0.3 | 2610 | 12.2 | 146,000 | 459 | 69 |
| Last FUP | 12 | 22.4 | 5.5 | 1680 | 14.0 | 130,000 | 702 | 61 |
Patient #2 laboratory findings.
| Pt#2 | ESR mm/h | IS | CRP mg/L | WBC/μL | HB g/dL | PLT/μL | IgG mg/dL | IgA mg/dL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before JAKinhibs | 27 | 29.1 | 1.7 | 5700 | 11.1 | 195,000 | 1645 | 399 |
| After JAKinhibs | 46 | 1.0 | 0.2 | 5110 | 12.4 | 337,000 | 1538 | 368 |
| Last FUP | 22 | 3.0 | 0.2 | 5400 | 12.9 | 252,000 | 1752 | 314 |
Patient #3 laboratory findings.
| Pt#3 | ESR mm/h | IS | CRP mg/L | WBC/μL | HB g/dL | PLT/μL | IgG mg/dL | IgA mg/dL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before JAKinhibs | 68 | 33.4 | 5.2 | 5320 | 12.5 | 357,000 | 1860 | 207 |
| After JAKinhibs | 60 | 32.0 | 2.4 | 10,220 | 11.4 | 318,000 | 1812 | 169 |
| Last FUP | 20 | ND | 12.0 | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND |
Patient #4 laboratory findings.
| Pt#4 | ESR mm/h | IS | CRP mg/L | WBC/μL | HB g/dL | PLT/μL | IgG mg/dL | IgA mg/dL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before JAKinhibs | 120 | 5.5 | 7.9 | 8050 | 11.3 | 499,000 | 1480 | 187 |
| After JAKinhibs | 65 | 2.0 | 3.7 | 7390 | 11.1 | 361,000 | 1613 | 107 |
| Last FUP | 38 | 1.7 | 1.0 | 6450 | 11.8 | 342,000 | 1527 | 91 |
Patient #5 laboratory findings.
| Pt#5 | ESR mm/h | IS | CRP mg/L | WBC/μL | HB g/dL | PLT/μL | IgG mg/dL | IgA mg/dL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before JAKinhibs | 56 | 3.4 | 46.6 | 11,030 | 12.3 | 216,000 | 1870 | 162 |
| After JAKinhibs | 81 | 2.0 | 16.0 | 7650 | 10.3 | 362,000 | 1323 | 185 |
| Last FUP | 69 | 4.0 | 11.6 | 5750 | 11.3 | 507,000 | 1334 | 172 |
Patient #6 laboratory findings.
| Pt#6 | ESR mm/h | IS | CRP mg/L | WBC/μL | HB g/dL | PLT/μL | IgG mg/dL | IgA mg/dL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before JAKinhibs | 33 | 38.8 | 1.4 | 11,030 | 14.3 | 424,000 | 948 | 197 |
| After JAKinhibs | 11 | 47.0 | 0.3 | 7650 | 12.2 | 362,000 | 953 | 147 |
| Last FUP | 10 | 44.2 | 0.3 | 4270 | 13.0 | 359,000 | 1061 | 176 |
Patient #7 laboratory findings.
| Pt#7 | ESR mm/h | IS | CRP mg/L | WBC/μL | HB g/dL | PLT/μL | IgG mg/dL | IgA mg/dL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before JAKinhibs | 39 | 17.7 | 3.9 | 6150 | 12.2 | 272,000 | 863 | 177 |
| After JAKinhibs | 12 | 1.0 | 0.7 | 7550 | 13.0 | 215,000 | 901 | 138 |
| Last FUP | 8 | 1.0 | 0.3 | 9100 | 14.7 | 174,000 | 910 | 125 |
Pt, patient; Last FUP, last follow-up; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; IS, IFN score, CRP, C-reactive protein; WBC, white blood cells; HB, hemoglobin; PLT, platelet; IgG, IgA, Immunoglobulins; ND = not done.
Figure 1Laboratory findings and corticosteroid dosage before and after treatment with Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors (JAKinhibs) in the seven subjects (pt 1–7). (a) ESR (b) CRP (c) IS (d) IgG (e) PLT (f) WBC (g) corticosteroid dosage. ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; CRP, C-reactive protein; IS, interferon score; IgG, immunoglobulins; PLT, platelets; WBC, white blood count; pt, patient.
Figure 2Cluster analysis and pathway enrichment. (a) Cluster analysis results (K-means clustering) considering 500 most variable protein-coding genes across all samples that divide subjects into subgroups by similarities. Each dot represents a subject; Dim1 and Dim2 show the higher differences between the main clusters; H-Cluster contains all the healthy control-group subjects (HC) and some patients (pt) affected with multifactorial disorders. D-Cluster contains mainly subjects with proven or suspected rare monogenic disorders. (b) Pathway analysis was run on differential expressed genes resulting from the comparison between the seven patients and the control-group subjects: each dot represents a pathway and the size is directly proportional to the number of genes. X-axis reports pathway fold enrichment. All the selected pathways showed a lowest adjusted-p-value of the given term over all iterations ≤0.01. Pathway are listed by increasing p-values.
Figure A1Cluster analysis of patients (pt) after JAKinhibs treatment and healthy control-group subjects (HC). Cluster analysis results (K-means clustering) considering 500 most variable protein coding genes across all samples that divide subjects into subgroups by similarities. Each dot represents a subject; Dim1 and Dim2 show the higher differences between the main clusters; D-Cluster contains three HC and patients #2, #3, #5, #6. H-Cluster 3: three HC and patient #4. Patient #1 and patient #7 are outliers.
Figure 3Pathway enrichment analysis before and after JAKinhibs treatment. Pt, patient.
Figure 4Pathway enrichment analysis before and after JAKinhibs treatment. Pt, patient.
Figure 5Pathway enrichment analysis before and after JAKinhibs treatment. Pt, patient.
Figure 6Pathway enrichment analysis before and after JAKinhibs treatment. Pt, patient.
Figure 7Pathway enrichment analysis before and after JAKinhibs treatment. Pt, patient.
Figure 8Pathway enrichment analysis was run on differential expressed genes resulting from the comparison between patient #1 before JAKinhibs and the control-group subjects and between patient #1 after JAKinhibs and the controls. Pathways altered uniquely before (a) or uniquely after (b) JAKinhibs were chosen. Each dot represents a pathway, and the size is directly proportional to the number of genes. On the X-axis the pathway fold enrichment is displayed. All the selected pathways showed a lowest adjusted p-value of the given term over all iterations ≤0.01, and the five most enriched pathways were elected, where applicable. Pathways are ordered by increasing p-values. Pathways altered before JAKinhibs are colored in dark grey and those altered after JAKinhibs in light grey.
Figure 9Pathway enrichment analysis was run on differential expressed genes resulting from the comparison between patient #2 before JAKinhibs and the control-group subjects and between patient #2 after JAKinhibs and the controls. Pathways altered uniquely before (a) or uniquely after (b) JAKinhibs were chosen. Each dot represents a pathway, and the size is directly proportional to the number of genes. On the X-axis the pathway fold enrichment is displayed. All the selected pathways showed a lowest adjusted p-value of the given term over all iterations ≤0.01, and the five most enriched pathways were elected, where applicable. Pathways are ordered by increasing p-values. Pathways altered before JAKinhibs are colored in dark grey and those altered after JAKinhibs in light grey.
Figure 10Pathway enrichment analysis was run on differential expressed genes resulting from the comparison between patient #3 before JAKinhibs and the control-group subjects and between patient #3 after JAKinhibs and the controls. Pathways altered uniquely before (a) or uniquely after (b) JAKinhibs were chosen. Each dot represents a pathway, and the size is directly proportional to the number of genes. On the X-axis is displayed the pathway fold enrichment. All the selected pathways showed a lowest adjusted p-value of the given term over all iterations ≤0.01, and the five most enriched pathways were elected, where applicable. Pathways are ordered by increasing p-values. Pathways altered before JAKinhibs are colored in dark grey and those altered after JAKinhibs in light grey.
Figure 11Pathway enrichment analysis was run on differential expressed genes resulting from the comparison between patient #4 before JAKinhibs and the control-group subjects and between patient #4 after JAKinhibs and the controls. Pathways altered uniquely before (a) or uniquely after (b) JAKinhibs were chosen. Each dot represents a pathway, and the size is directly proportional to the number of genes. On the X-axis the pathway fold enrichment is displayed. All the selected pathways showed a lowest adjusted p-value of the given term over all iterations ≤0.01, and the five most enriched pathways were elected, where applicable. Pathways are ordered by increasing p-values. Pathways altered before JAKinhibs are colored in dark grey and those altered after JAKinhibs in light grey.
Figure 12Pathway enrichment analysis was run on differential expressed genes resulting from the comparison between patient #5 before JAKinhibs and the control-group subjects, and between patient #5 after JAKinhibs and the controls. Pathways altered uniquely before (a) or uniquely after (b) JAKinhibs were chosen. Each dot represents a pathway, and the size is directly proportional to the number of genes. On the X-axis the pathway fold enrichment is displayed. All the selected pathways showed a lowest adjusted p-value of the given term over all iterations ≤0.01, and the five most enriched pathways were elected, where applicable. Pathways are ordered by increasing p-values. Pathways altered before JAKinhibs are colored in dark grey and those altered after JAKinhibs in light grey.
Figure 13Pathway enrichment analysis was run on differential expressed genes resulting from the comparison between patient #6 before JAKinhibs and the control-group subjects, and between patient #6 after JAKinhibs and the controls. Pathways altered uniquely before (a) or uniquely after (b) JAKinhibs were chosen. Each dot represents a pathway, and the size is directly proportional to the number of genes. On the X-axis the pathway fold enrichment is displayed. All the selected pathways showed a lowest adjusted p-value of the given term over all iterations ≤0.01, and the five most enriched pathways were elected, where applicable. Pathways are ordered by increasing p-values. Pathways altered before JAKinhibs are colored in dark grey and those altered after JAKinhibs in light grey.
Figure 14Pathway enrichment analysis was run on differential expressed genes resulting from the comparison between patient #7 before JAKinhibs and the control-group subjects and between patient #7 after JAKinhibs and the controls. Pathways altered uniquely before (a) or uniquely after (b) JAKinhibs were chosen. Each dot represents a pathway, and the size is directly proportional to the number of genes. On the X-axis the pathway fold enrichment is displayed. All the selected pathways showed a lowest adjusted p-value of the given term over all iterations ≤0.01, and the five most enriched pathways were elected, where applicable. Pathways are ordered by increasing p-values. Pathways altered before JAKinhibs are colored in dark grey and those altered after JAKinhibs in light grey.
Common differentially expressed genes (DEGs) altered only after JAKinhibs.
| Gene | Patient #1 | Patient #2 | Patient #3 | Patient #4 | Patient #5 | Patient #6 | Patient #7 |
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Up-reg, upregulated gene. Down-reg, downregulated gene. Genes are reported in italics. Background colors display genes expressed in different patients: patient #1 in green, patient #2 in pink, patient #3 in light blue, patient #4 in orange, patient #5 in blue, patient #6 in red, and patient #7 in grey.
RNAseq samples.
| Datasets | Subjects | RNAseq Details | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample/ | Female ( | Male ( | Whole Blood Collection/RNA Extraction | RNAseq Library Preparation/Platform | Read Length/Coverage |
| Rheumatologic patient sample before JAKinhibs/ | 6 | 1 | PAXgene blood | Illumina TruSeq stranded mRNA library protocol/Novaseq | Paired-end |
| Rheumatologic patient sample after JAKinhibs/ | |||||
| Healthy subjects/ | 3 | 3 | |||