| Literature DB >> 34281281 |
Lai-San Wong1, Yu-Ta Yen2, Chih-Hung Lee1.
Abstract
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a prototypic inflammatory disease that presents with intense itching. The pathophysiology of AD is multifactorial, involving environmental factors, genetic susceptibility, skin barrier function, and immune responses. A recent understanding of pruritus transmission provides more information about the role of pruritogens in the pathogenesis of AD. There is evidence that pruritogens are not only responsible for eliciting pruritus, but also interact with immune cells and act as inflammatory mediators, which exacerbate the severity of AD. In this review, we discuss the interaction between pruritogens and inflammatory molecules and summarize the targeted therapies for AD.Entities:
Keywords: atopic dermatitis; itch; pruritogens
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34281281 PMCID: PMC8269281 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22137227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Potential experimental targeted biologics against pruritogens in AD.
| Target | Study Phase | Enrollment | Efficacy | Status | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| JNJ 39758979 | H4R | Phase 2a | Improvement of histamine-related pruritus. | Termination due to agranulocytosis | [ | |
| Adriforant (ZPL-3893787) | H4R | Phase 2 | At week 8, | Completed | [ | |
| Rupatatine | H1R and PAF | Phase 3 | Improvement of total pruritus score | Completed | [ | |
| Tezepelumab (plus TCS) | TSLP | Phase 2a | At week 12, | Completed | [ | |
| MK8226 | TSLP receptor inhibitor | Phase 1b | Results not yet released | Terminate due to business reason | ||
| Etokimab (ANB020) | IL-33 | Phase 2a | At day 29, | Completed | [ | |
| Etokimab (ANB020) | IL-33 | Phase 2b | Results not yet released | Recruiting | ||
| REGN3500 | IL-33 | Phase 2 | Results not yet released | Completed | ||
| PF-06817024 | IL-33 | Phase 1 | Results not yet released | Completed | ||
| Pitrakinra (AER 100, BAY 16-9996) | IL-4 alpha receptor | Phase 2a | Results not yet released | Completed | ||
| CM310 | IL-4 alpha receptor | Phase 2b | Recruiting | Recruiting | ||
| CBP-201 | IL-4 alpha receptor | Phase 2 | Active, not recruiting | Active, not recruiting | ||
| AK210 | IL-4 alpha receptor | Phase 1 | Recruiting | Recruiting | ||
| Tralokinumab | IL-13 | Phase 3 | At week 16 | Completed | [ | |
| Tralokinumab | IL-13 | Phase 3 | At week16 | Completed | [ | |
| Tralokinumab | IL-13 | Phase 3 | At week 16 | Completed | [ | |
| Lebrikizumab | IL-13 | Phase 2b (NCT03443024) | At week 16 | Completed | [ | |
| Nemolizumab (plus TCS) | IL-31 receptor alpha inhibitor | Phase 2b (NCT03100344) | At week 24 | Completed | [ | |
| Nemolizumab (plus TCS) | IL-31 receptor alpha inhibitor | Phase 3 | VAS score for pruritus improvement 42.8% vs. 21.4% | Completed | [ | |
| BMS-981164 | IL-31 | Phase 1 (NCT01614756) | Results not yet released | Completed | ||
| Tradipitant | Neurokinin receptor | Phase 3 | Improvement of pruritus and sleep in mild lesion AD | Completed | [ | |
| Tradipitant | Neurokinin receptor | Phase 3 | Recruiting | Recruiting | ||
| Serlopitant | Neurokinin receptor | Phase 2 | Failed to meet the primary endpoint WI-NRS score | Completed |
AD, atopic dermatitis; EASI, eczema area and severity index; EASI 50, improvement of greater than or equal to 50% in EASI; EASI 75, improvement of greater than or equal to 75% in EASI; NRS, numeric rating scale; SCORA, scoring of atopic dermatitis; IGA, investigators global assessment; IGA 0/1, IGA 0 or 1 (clear or almost clear) plus greater than or equal to 2 grade improvement; PP-NRS, peak pruritus numeric rating scales; TCS, topical corticosteroids; WI-NRS, worst itch numeric rating scale. The data above was retrieved by 5 June 2021.
Figure 1The interplay among the skin barrier, immune system, and nervous system in patients with AD. Skin barrier disruption promotes the release of inflammatory cytokines from keratinocytes, leading to immune activation, particularly of the Th2 pathway. Th2 cytokines initiate the inflammatory process by recruiting and activating more immune cells to the dermis. Simultaneously, various pruritogens are released, activating the cutaneous nerve fiber terminals. The itch sensation can be transmitted by histamine-dependent or histamine-independent pathways. Neuropeptides are released by efferent fibers and stimulate the immune cells to exacerbate the inflammatory process. Moreover, scratching triggered by an itch may further damage the skin barrier, leading to a vicious cycle.