| Literature DB >> 33172122 |
Krzysztof Szalus1, Magdalena Trzeciak1, Roman J Nowicki1.
Abstract
A common disease worldwide is known as atopic dermatitis (AD), named also as atopic eczema, which is a chronic recurrent complex inflammatory skin disorder. It affects 2-10% of the adult population and up to 20% of the pediatric population. The clinical AD picture appears in typically localized eczema and dry skin, and is dominated by a persistent pruritus followed by sleep disturbances. AD strongly impacts on the quality of life of AD patients and their families as well as on social and economic aspects. The pathogenesis of the disease is complex and consists of multiple interactions between immunological disturbances, skin barrier defect, and microbial dysbiosis with environmental influences. The treatment of AD reflects the pathogenetic disorders, starting from basic emollient therapy, and goes to topical anti-inflammatory regimens followed by phototherapy, systemic immunosuppressive drugs, and new biologic immunomodulators. This paper will thus summarize the novel collection of biological treatment JAK-STAT inhibitors dedicated to AD.Entities:
Keywords: JAK-STAT; abrocitinib; atopic dermatitis; baricitinib; cerdulatinib; delgocitinib; gusacitinib; ruxolitinib; tofacitinib; upadacitinib
Year: 2020 PMID: 33172122 PMCID: PMC7694787 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms8111743
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Figure 1Differential diagnosis of atopic dermatitis (AD). Main potential diseases that can confuse AD diagnosis are included in the table. Many different options do make this an easy way to reach final diagnosis.
Figure 2Typical location and morphology of atopic eczema. Photos show typical location of skin lesions in children.
Figure 3AD pathogenesis. A compound process in the picture unveiled the combined pathogenesis of AD that leads to the acute phase of the disease. The picture is simplified to understand the influence of many different factors including environment on AD focus. Key (+: stimulation, ↑: increase, ↓: decrease).
Figure 4JAK-STAT targeting sites. In the figure, we present grip points followed by the particular JAK-STAT pathway for major inhibitors described in the article.
Comparison of JAK STAT inhibitors.
| JAK-STAT Inhibitor | Target | Type of Application | Phase of Studies | Most Common Side Effects | Dose Related Effect | Tested Dose and Effect on AD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abrocitinib | Selective JAK1 [ | Oral | 3 | Upper respiratory tract infections, headache, nausea, diarrhea | Decrease in platelet count | For 100 mg and 200 mg—achievement EASI-75 and IGA response in week 12. |
| Baricitinib | Selective JAK1 and JAK2 [ | Oral | 3 | Nasopharyngitis, headache | None | Improvement in itch was achieved in 1st week for 4 mg and in 2nd for 2 mg, improvements in night-time awakenings, skin pain obtained by 1 st week for both doses. |
| Upadacitinib | Selective JAK1 [ | Oral | 3 | Upper respiratory tract infections | 30 mg once daily turned out to be the most effective | Improvement in EASI for doses 7.5 mg, 15 mg, and 30 mg. |
| Tofacitinib | Nonselective JAK1/3, TYK2, JAK2 [ | Oral and topical | 2 | No side effects in this phase were observed | None | Improvement in EASI by 1st week for 2% ointment and significant improvement in itch by day two. For 5 mg and 10 mg twice daily p.o. observed reduction of SCORAD by 66.6% and also reduction of pruritus. |
| Delgocitinib | Nonselective JAK1, JAK2, JAK3, TYK2, [ | Topical | 3 | Mild white blood cells drop, headache | None | Improvement in EASI for 0.5% ointment. |
| Ruxolitinib | Selective JAK1 and JAK2 [ | Topical | 2 | Pain in the place of application | 1.5% cream was the most effective | 1.5% RUX cream achieved the greatest improvement in EASI and in IGA. Also rapid itch reduction was obtained. |
| Cerdulatininb | Selective JAK1, JAK2, JAK3, TYK2, SYK [ | Topical | 2 | Diarrhea, neutropenia, | None | 0.4% gel has significant EASI improvement. Rapid pruritus NRS score reduction. |
| Gusacitinib | Selective JAK1, JAK2, JAK3, TYK2, SYK [ | Oral | 1 | Headache, nausea, diarrhea, rhino-pharyngitis, back-pain, mild hypertension, decrease in lymphocyte | None | All doses 20 mg, 40 mg and 80 mg were superior to placebo achieving improvement in EASI 50 and 75 with highest efficacy for 40 mg |