| Literature DB >> 34947847 |
Flavia Anghel1, Diana Nitusca1,2, Patricia Cristodor3.
Abstract
Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory, autoimmune-mediated disease that affects millions of individuals worldwide. Advances in treatment with biological agents represented by monoclonal antibodies, such as TNF-α inhibitors (TNFI), IL-17A and IL-12/23 antagonists have not only benefited from outstanding clinical efficacy with lower side effects compared to conventional systemic therapy, but also raised the standards towards therapeutic success, fact reflected in the greater Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) response rates. However, due to their relatively recent introduction in clinical practice, and despite their proven superior efficacy, further research is needed for monitoring the eventual changes in treatment-induced parameters, especially of metabolic origin. In this respect, initial reports stress on one particular comorbidity associated with psoriasis-obesity-which seems to be not only a risk and result of the disease, but also an adverse effect of long-term therapy with some biologics. The consequent drug-induced increase in body mass index (BMI) of patients suffering from psoriasis undergoing biological treatment appears to contribute to the progression of the disease, promote drug discontinuation and reduce overall clinical efficacy of monoclonal antibodies. Therefore, we review herein the impact of body weight (BMI) increase on the biological treatment of psoriasis, to further investigate on its relationship with the disease and aid on the management of treatment schemes that take into account individual characteristics of patients, such as body mass, for a more efficient and personalized therapy approach.Entities:
Keywords: body mass index; drug-induced weight gain; monoclonal antibodies; psoriasis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34947847 PMCID: PMC8703749 DOI: 10.3390/life11121316
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Life (Basel) ISSN: 2075-1729
Figure 1Flow-diagram of the study selection process.
TNFI and the effect of weight gain (increased BMI) on drug efficacy.
| TNFI | Structure and Mechanism | Effect on BMI/Weight Gain | Influence of BMI on Drug Efficacy | Commentary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| mouse-derived chimeric IgG1; neutralizes both soluble, and membrane-bound TNF-α | Significant, gradual increase [ | Increased BMI promotes drug discontinuation [ | Weight-dependent dosing shows to increase efficacy [ |
|
| prototypic recombinant fusion protein; inhibits only soluble TNF-α | Non-uniform [ | Pharmacokinetic interactions due to wider adipose tissue [ | Weight-dependent dosing not implemented to date [ |
|
| phage display-derived, fully monoclonal antibody | Significant mass increase [ | Pharmacokinetic interactions due to wider adipose tissue [ | Conflicting studies call for further research to draw definitive conclusions |
IL-17A and the effect of weight gain (increased BMI) on drug efficacy.
| IL-17A Inhibitors | Structure and Mechanism | Effect on BMI/Weight Gain | Influence of BMI on Drug Efficacy | Commentary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| recombinant fully human IgG1/kappa monoclonal antibody | Constant BMI levels; no weight gain [ | Similar drug efficacy regardless of BMI values [ | Could be a better alternative for obese patients; |
|
| complete monoclonal antibody of the subclass IgG4 | No significant weight gain [ | Similar drug efficacy regardless of BMI values [ | Could be a better alternative for obese patients; |
IL-12/23 and the effect of weight gain (increased BMI) on drug efficacy.
| IL-12/23 Inhibitors | Structure and Mechanism | Effect on BMI/Weight Gain | Influence of BMI on Drug Efficacy | Commentary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| fully human monoclonal antibody (mAb) that binds specifically to IL-12/IL-23p40 | No reported BMI changes following treatment [ | Pharmacokinetic interactions affecting serum concentration and drug clearance [ | Could be a better alternative for obese patients; |
Figure 2Diagram on evidence regarding BMI impact upon treatment response with TNFI for psoriasis; TNFI induces drug discontinuation, weight gain and the efficacy is decreased with increase in BMI values.
Figure 3Diagram on evidence regarding BMI impact upon treatment response with IL-17A inhibitors for psoriasis; IL-17A inhibitors have neutral effect on weight gain and no decrease in efficacy has been reported for increasing BMI.
Figure 4Diagram on evidence regarding BMI impact upon treatment response with IL-12/23 inhibitors for psoriasis; IL-12/23 inhibitors induce weight gain, however no drug discontinuation or decrease in efficacy with BMI increase was reported.