| Literature DB >> 34563217 |
Meredyth G Ll Wilkinson1,2,3, Claire T Deakin4,5,6, Charalampia Papadopoulou4,7, Despina Eleftheriou4,7, Lucy R Wedderburn4,5,6,7.
Abstract
Juvenile Idiopathic Inflammatory Myopathies (IIM) are a group of rare diseases that are heterogeneous in terms of pathology that can include proximal muscle weakness, associated skin changes and systemic involvement. Despite options for treatment, many patients continue to suffer resistant disease and lasting side-effects. Advances in the understanding of the immunopathology and genetics underlying IIM may specify new therapeutic targets, particularly where conventional treatment has not achieved a clinical response. An upregulated type I interferon signature is strongly associated with disease and could be a prime target for developing more specific therapeutics. There are multiple components of the IFN pathway that could be targeted for blockade therapy.Downstream of the cytokine receptor complexes are the Janus kinase-signal transducers and activators of transcription (JAK-STAT) pathway, which consists of JAK1-3, TYK2, and STAT1-6. Therapeutic inhibitors have been developed to target components of this pathway. Promising results have been observed in case studies reporting the use of the JAK inhibitors, Baricitinib, Tofacitinib and Ruxolitinib in the treatment of refractory Juvenile Dermatomyositis (JDM). There is still the question of safety and efficacy for the use of JAK inhibitors in JDM that need to be addressed by clinical trials. Here we review the future for the use of JAK inhibitors as a treatment for JDM.Entities:
Keywords: IFN; IIM; JAK inhibitors; JAK/STAT pathway; JDM; Juvenile dermatomyositis; Treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34563217 PMCID: PMC8466894 DOI: 10.1186/s12969-021-00637-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.054
JDM disease features
| Median age of onset (IQR): | 6.3 (3.8–9.6) years [ | |
| Incidence: | 7.98 cases/million/year [ | |
| Prevalence: | 14/100,000 [ | |
| Sex distribution (F:M): | 2.1:1 [ | |
| Muscle weakness | Most patients | |
| Cutaneous manifestations | 30–70% [ | |
| Calcinosis | 12–47% [ | |
| Lipodystrophy | 8–14% [ | |
| Interstitial lung disease | 8–19% [ | |
| Myocardial involvement | Common, non-specific [ | |
| Vasculopathy | Most patients, central to pathogensis [ | |
MSA 49% + ve for MSA | - Transcriptional intermediary factor 1 (TIF-1γ) 22–29% | |
| - Nuclear matrix protein 2 (NXP2) 23–25% | ||
| -Aminoacyl tRNA synthetase (ASA) 2–4% | ||
| -Signal recognition particle (SRP) < 2% | ||
| −3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase (HMGCR) < 1% | ||
| -Nucleosome-remodelling deacetylase complex (Mi-2) 4–10% | ||
| -Small ubiquitin-like modifier activating enzyme (SAE) < 1% | ||
| -Melanoma differentiation associated gene 5 (MDA5) 7–38% [ | ||
| Type I IFN signature | Muscle, blood [ | |
| Mononuclear cells | Muscle [ | |
| FOXP3+ regulatory T cells | Increased in muscle [ | |
| pDCs | Increased in muscle/skin [ | |
| Myogenic pre-cursor cells | Increased source of IFN in muscle [ | |
| Mast cells | Increased in skin [ | |
| Natural killer cells | Decreased in blood [ | |
| Cytokines | ||
| Blood: | Increased IRF-4, IL-6, IL-17F, Il-23A, IL-21, GATA3, IL-1β | |
| Muscle: | Increased GATA3, IL-13, STAT5B [ |
Emerging biologic therapies for the treatment of adult and juvenile IIM
| Biologic | Mechanism | Clinical trial type | Clinical trial number | Patient group | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| rituximab [ | Monoclonal anti-CD20 antibody that depletes B cells | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-phase trial | JDM and DM | Higher proportion of JDM (87%) patients treated with rituximab met the definition of improvement more quickly compared to adult DM (78%) | |
| belimumab | Anti-B cell activating factor (BAFF) monoclonal antibody | Multicentre double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | Refractory IIM | Evaluating the efficacy and safety | |
| abatacept | Modified fully human soluble recombinant protein that consists of cytotoxic T cell lymphocyte antigen-4 (CTLA4) fused with Fc region of human IgG1 | Interventional clinical trial | Refractory JDM Myositis-associated ILD IIM | Clinical improvement Evaluate efficacy and safety | |
| bimagrumab [ | Human recombinant monoclonal anti-ACVR2B activin type 2 receptor antibody | Phase IIb/III double-blind, placebo-controlled multicentre study Phase IIb/III Study | IBM/IIM | Improvement in muscle volume and strength | |
| spiponimod | Oral selective sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor modulator, acts by preventing the migration of lymphocytes to inflammatory sites and therefore reducing inflammation | Multicentre, phase 2, double-blind, randomized, controlled trial | IIM | International Myositis Assessment Study (IMACS) definition of improvement | |
| apremilast [ | Phosphodiesterase-4(PDE-4) inhibitor, reduces the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines by increasing cyclic adenosine monophosphate | Open-label, single-centre study Phase two, open-label, single group assignment, interventional study | DM | 30% reduction in the cutaneous disease activity and severity index (CDASI) Safety, efficacy and clinical response | |
| gevokizumab | Humanised IgG2 monoclonal antibody against human IL-1β | Proof-of-concept, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | EudraCT number: 2012–005772-34 | IIM | Prematurely terminated therefore limited results |
| eculizumab [ | Monoclonal humanised antibody against terminal complement components | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot study Phase two, randomized, placebo-controlled, third-party-blind study | IIM DM | Improvement of global physician score for cutaneous disease Evaluation of safety and efficacy, results pending. | |
| basiliximab [ | IL-2R chimeric monoclonal antibody; blocks Il-2 receptor on the surface of activated T-cells | Open-label, randomized, parallel assignment without masking, phase-2, single center study | Amyopathic dermatomyositis (CADM) patients with interstitial pneumonia | Primary outcome measure is survival at 52 weeks | |
| sifalimumab [ | anti-IFNα monoclonal antibody | Double-blind, phase 1b multicentre randomized control trial | DM and PM | Neutralisation of IFN gene signature suppression against disease improvement |
Fig. 1JAK-STAT pathway with JAK inhibitor targets. The activation of the JAK-STAT pathway after IFN type 1 has engaged with the associated receptor, IFNR. This induces the transcription of proteins. Tofacitinib inhibits JAK1/2/3. Ruxolitinib and Baricitinib inhibit JAK 1/2, inhibtion prevents STAT phosphorylation, dimeraziation and transolcation into the nucleuse. This in turn stops the transcription of pro-inflammatory proteins
Fig. 2JAK domains and homologous regions. JAKs are constructed from four domains made of seven homologous regions (JH1–7)
Case studies or case series of JAK-inhibitors in juvenile dermatomyositis
| Case study | JAK-inhibitors | Patient | Disease course and prior treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aeschilimann et al. 2018 [ | ruxolitinib | 13 year old; JDM (anti-NXP2) | - Un-controlled disease with admission to ICU - Complexity of severe symptoms over 18 months -Prednisolone dependant, refractory to treatment including; methotrexate, IVIG, plasma exchange, MMF and rituximab -Increased IFN scores and STAT1 phosphorylation of T-cells and monocytes | After 52 weeks (12 months) of treatment: -Improvement of disease activity scores - decreased STAT1 phosphorylation in T-cells |
| Papadopoulou et al. 2019 [ | baricitinib | 11 year old; JDM (anti-TIF1-γ, anti-Ro52) | - 7 year history of JDM (with calcinosis) - steroid dependant; refractory to sequential treatment with azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil, infliximab, adalimumab, rituximab, tacrolimus and cyclosporine, intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) - negative for class 4 and 5 variants of monogenic interferonopathies | After 26 weeks (6 months) of treatment: - clear improvement of disease - IFN biomarkers decreased - decreased level of CEC |
| Sabbagh et al. 2019 [ | tofacitinib | 2 anti-MDA5 JDM patients 12y/o male 15y/o female | Elevated 28-gene IFN score Un-controlled disease: Patient 1 – continuous flares after treatment with pulsed methylprednisolone, IVIg, methotrexate, MMF, rituximab Patient 2 – continuous flares after treatment with pulsed methylprednisolone, IVIg, MMF, abatacept, cyclophosphamide, rituximab and sildenafil | After 26 week (6 months) of treatment: - decrease in disease activity score - Decrease of IFN score and STAT1 phosphorylation of T-cells and monocytes |
| Yu et al. 2020 [ | tofacitinib | n = 3 JDM 11y/o fem (ANA 1:320, anti-MDA5) 10y/o female (ANA 1:80, anti-Mi-2, anti-Ro-52 10y/o male (Negative) | Refractory JDM: patients failed ≥2 steroid sparing agents or high-dose steroids. | After 26 week (6 months): - Significant improvement of clinical scores; CMAS, MMT8, PGA, DAS and CHAQ |
| Le Voyer et al. 2021 [ | baricitnib ruxolitinib | 2/3 female mean 8.7 years [ NXP2 = 1 TIF1-y = 1 MDA5 = 1 No MSA = 0 5/7 female mean 9.1 years [ NXP2 = 3 TIF1-y = 2 MDA5 = 1 No MSA = 1 | 9 refractory disease and 1 new-onset Refractory muscle involvement ( Ulcerative skin disease ( | After 26 weeks (6 months): →Improvement in clinical scores →Clinically inactive disease →Decrease in seral IFN-α |
| Ding et al. 2021 [ | tofacitinib 7/25 (28%) ruxolitinib 18/25 (72%) | 11/25 (44%) female Mean age of onset 4.6 ± 3.3 years Mean age to start JAK inhibitors 7.2 ± 4 years | All refractory 8/25 (32%) ineffective treatment 17/25 (68%) glucocorticoid dependant | 25 patients followed up median of 34 weeks (7 months) (range – 3-21 months) →24/25 (96%) had rash improvement, 16/24 (66.7%) complete resolution →7/25 (28%) improved CMAS |
| Kim et al. 2021 [ | baricitinib | 4 JDM (5.8–20.7 years old) | →Chronically active disease →Failed 3–6 immunomodulatory medications | After 24 weeks of treatment: →Disease improvement assessed by clinical score →Down regulation of IRG →Decrease in serum IP-10 |