Muskaan Sachdeva1, Abrahim Abduelmula2, Asfandyar Mufti3, Jorge R Georgakopoulos3, Yuliya Lytvyn1, Jensen Yeung3,4,5,6. 1. 7938 Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, ON, Canada. 2. 70384 Faculty of Medicine, Western University, London, ON, Canada. 3. Division of Dermatology, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, ON, Canada. 4. Department of Dermatology, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada. 5. Department of Dermatology, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada. 6. Probity Medical Research, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While biologic therapies revolutionized treatment of immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs), some adverse effects have been noted. This includes the development and exacerbation of PsA in patients on biologic agents, however the outcomes were not extensively explored. OBJECTIVE: To perform a systematic review to characterize the outcomes of PsA onset or exacerbation secondary to biologic use. METHODS: MEDLINE and EMBASE search conducted on March 23, 2021 resulted in 18 studies comprised of 64 patients. RESULTS: Of the 64 patients, 57 (89.1%) experienced new-onset PsA and 7 (10.9%) experienced exacerbation of preexisting PsA following exposure to a biologic; most commonly a TNF-α inhibitor (42.2%, n = 27/64) and IL-12/23 inhibitors (39.1%, n = 25/64). The mean durations of biologic use before PsA onset and exacerbation were 14.8 months and 5.2 months, respectively. Twenty-four patients (44.4%) subsequently switched to an alternate biologic without further reports of PsA-related adverse events. All 64 patients reported a specific treatment for PsA; most commonly discontinuation of the associated biologic agent (32.8%, n = 21/64). Complete resolution of PsA was reported in 35.9% (n = 23/64) of cases, of which 91.3% (n = 21/23) resulted after discontinuation of biologic. CONCLUSION: Although we characterized outcomes of PsA induction and exacerbation secondary to biologic use, large-scale studies are required.
BACKGROUND: While biologic therapies revolutionized treatment of immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs), some adverse effects have been noted. This includes the development and exacerbation of PsA in patients on biologic agents, however the outcomes were not extensively explored. OBJECTIVE: To perform a systematic review to characterize the outcomes of PsA onset or exacerbation secondary to biologic use. METHODS: MEDLINE and EMBASE search conducted on March 23, 2021 resulted in 18 studies comprised of 64 patients. RESULTS: Of the 64 patients, 57 (89.1%) experienced new-onset PsA and 7 (10.9%) experienced exacerbation of preexisting PsA following exposure to a biologic; most commonly a TNF-α inhibitor (42.2%, n = 27/64) and IL-12/23 inhibitors (39.1%, n = 25/64). The mean durations of biologic use before PsA onset and exacerbation were 14.8 months and 5.2 months, respectively. Twenty-four patients (44.4%) subsequently switched to an alternate biologic without further reports of PsA-related adverse events. All 64 patients reported a specific treatment for PsA; most commonly discontinuation of the associated biologic agent (32.8%, n = 21/64). Complete resolution of PsA was reported in 35.9% (n = 23/64) of cases, of which 91.3% (n = 21/23) resulted after discontinuation of biologic. CONCLUSION: Although we characterized outcomes of PsA induction and exacerbation secondary to biologic use, large-scale studies are required.
Biologic therapies have revolutionized the treatment of immune-mediated
inflammatory diseases (IMIDs) by targeting cytokine activity, specifically
interleukins (IL) and tumor necrosis factor (TNF).
Although inhibiting proinflammatory cytokines can prevent disease
progression, biologic use has been recently associated with the onset of
paradoxical dermatologic adverse events.
In particular, several cases have reported an onset or exacerbation
of psoriatic arthritis (PsA) following biologic treatment.PsA is a chronic, immune-mediated disease characterized by inflammation of the
entheses and joints.
It has an incidence of approximately 6 per 100,000 per year,
affecting men and women equally.
PsA is a multisystemic disease with immunological factors influencing
its pathogenicity, including the expression of natural killer group 2 member
(NKG2D) driven by IL-15.
Cytokine imbalance due to initiation of a biologic agent has been
associated with PsA related joint inflammation.
Subsequent PsA onset can have a significant impact on one’s quality
of life due to associated comorbidities including osteoporosis, bowel
inflammation, uveitis, and cardiovascular disease.Studies describing PsA secondary to biologic use are limited to individual case
reports; thus, the clinical outcomes are not known with certainty.
Currently, there is no summary of biologics that has been linked to PsA
onset or exacerbation. The aim of this review is to summarize relevant
reports of development of new-onset PsA or exacerbation of preexisting PsA
in patients on biologics for IMIDs.
Methods
This systematic review was conducted in accordance with the Preferred Reporting
Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines.
Ethics board approval was waived due to the nature of the study.
Study Identification
OVID Embase and OVID MEDLINE databases were systematically searched from
inception to March 23, 2021 using variations of the following search
keywords: “psoriatic arthritis” AND specific biologics (see Supplemental File 1). In accordance with the
predetermined inclusion criteria, titles/abstracts and full texts of
retrieved articles were independently screened by two reviewers (A.A.
and M.S.), and any conflicts were resolved by a third reviewer (A.M).
A reviewer (A.A.) manually searched the reference lists of relevant
reviews and studies to identify additional articles that may have been
missed by the initial database search.
Inclusion Criteria
Original articles written in the English language were included if
they:reported intervention of interest (i.e., patients on biologic
therapy),involved study population (i.e., human participants that
experienced an onset or exacerbation of PsA post-biologic
initiation),had an observational (i.e., case reports, case series,
cross-sectional or cohort studies) study design.Studies that included biologics as treatments for PsA or that did not
provide specific individual patient data were excluded. Additionally,
conference abstracts and studies with irretrievable full texts were
excluded.
Data Extraction
Two reviewers (A.A and M.S.) independently extracted data on study
characteristics (study author, study design, sample size), patient
characteristics (age, sex, comorbidities, relevant family or personal
history of conditions, concomitant medications, prior failed
treatments), information on biologics (dose, frequency, mechanism),
and characteristics of PsA diagnosis and progression (preexisting or
de novo PsA, location, treatments, biologic discontinuations,
resolution outcomes and recurrence or residual side-effects). The
following terms were defined:Latency period: duration between biologic initiation to PsA
development or exacerbation.Resolution: complete or partial resolution of PsA as reported
by individual studies.Resolution period: time from treatment initiation for PsA to
partial or complete resolution of PsA.
Data Synthesis and Analysis
Due to the considerable heterogeneity of the included studies,
meta-analysis was not performed. A descriptive analysis was conducted,
and frequency data summated as percentages (%).
Quality and Adverse Drug Reaction Assessments
The quality of evidence was assessed by A.A. and M.S. using the Oxford
Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine 2011 Levels of Evidence.
Additionally, causation probability between PsA development and
offending drug was assessed using the Naranjo criteria.
For criteria 1, which evaluates the presence of previous
conclusive reports on drug associated PsA reaction, “yes” was only
scored if there were reports of the specific drug. For criteria 5,
alternative causes that could on their own have caused PsA included
the following conditions known to be associated with PsA: alopecia
areata, pernicious anemia, psoriasis, Addison’s disease, rheumatoid
arthritis, adult-onset insulin dependent diabetes mellitus,
cardiovascular disease, Lyme disease, Streptococcal infection,
systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), inflammatory bowel disease (IBD),
and atopic disease.
Results
Screening of the initial titles and abstracts of 2065 studies was followed by
full text screening of 103 articles, 18 articles fulfilled the
preestablished inclusion criteria and were included in this systematic
review (12 case reports, 4 case series, and 2 retrospective cohort studies
and 1 prospective cohort study) (Supplemental File 2).
Overall, 64 patients reported PsA-related complications while on
biologics (Supplementary File 3). These patients had a mean age of
50.8 years, ranging from 17 to 85 years. Of the 64 patients that reported
sex, males comprised of 53.1% (n = 34/64) and females of
46.9% (n = 30/64) (Supplemental File 4). The collected patient demographics
are in line with PsA development in the general populaceOf the 64 patients, 89.1% (n = 57/64) experienced PsA onset
and 10.9% (n = 7/64) experienced exacerbation of
preexisting PsA after administration of the following reported biologics:
TNF-α inhibitors (42.2%, n = 27/64), IL-12/23 inhibitor
(39.1%, n = 25/64), IL-17 inhibitor (10.9%,
n = 7/64), CD-20 inhibitor (4.7%, n
= 3/64), IL-23 inhibitor (1.6%, n = 1/64), and α4-integrin
monoclonal antibody (1.6%, n = 1/64) (Supplemental File 5). These biologics were given
predominantly for indications such as psoriasis (89.1%, n =
57/64), rheumatoid arthritis (6.3%, n = 4/64), and Crohn’s
disease (1.6%, n = 1/64). Common locations of joints
affected included the hands (n = 17), feet
(n = 8), and knees (n = 7). Mean
duration of psoriasis in patients was 17.2 years (n =
32/64).The mean duration of exposure to biologics before PsA development or
exacerbation was 14.8 months (range: 1 to 48) and 5.2 months (range: 0.25 to
12), respectively. The mean duration ranged from 14.9 months for ustekinumab
(IL-12/23 inhibitor) to 1 week for brodalumab (IL-17 inhibitor). Biologics
were maintained with Ustekinumab in 5.6% (n = 3/54) and
Rituximab in 1.9% (n = 1/54) of cases and withdrawn in
51.9% (n = 28/54) after appearance of PsA related
complications; withdrawal information was not available for 40.7%
(n = 22/54) of cases.A specific treatment for PsA was reported for 64 patients, including
discontinuation of biologics (32.8%, n = 21/64) and/or
treatment with corticosteroids (10.9%, n = 7/64) and
ustekinumab (10.9%, n = 7/64), respectively. Complete
resolution of PsA was observed in 35.9% (n = 23/64) of
cases; 56.2% (n = 13/23) after biologic discontinuations
only (mean resolution period of 6.3 months), 30.4% (n =
7/23) of cases after biologic discontinuation and treatment (mean resolution
period of 1.7 months), and 8.7% (n = 2/23) after biologic
continuation and treatment (mean resolution period not reported). Whereas,
partial resolution was achieved in 3.1% (n = 2/64) of cases
after biologic discontinuation and treatment (n = 1), and
biologic discontinuation only (n = 1); mean resolution
period was not reported. Additionally, 24 patients switched to an alternate
biologic for the primary indication including: adalimumab
(n = 7), ustekinumab (n = 5),
secukinumab (n = 4), etanercept (n = 3),
infliximab (n = 2), guselkumab, rituximab, and golimumab
(n = 1 each) (Supplemental File 5); no PsA related adverse events were
reported after the switch to another biologic agent.
Discussion
Various paradoxical reactions in patients using biologics have been described
in the literature. This systematic review summarized the characteristics and
outcomes of PsA-related complications in patients on biologic therapy. The
results show that a total of 64 patients, majority being treated for
psoriasis (89.1%), experienced new onset or worsening of PsA during biologic
therapy. Among these, 42.2% were receiving TNF-α inhibitors, 39.1% were on
IL-12/23 inhibitors, 10.9% on IL-17A inhibitors, 4.7% on CD-20 inhibitors,
and 1.6% on α4-integrin monoclonal antibodies and IL-23 Inhibitors each .
The mean duration between biologic initiation and PsA onset or exacerbation
was 14.8 months and 5.2 months respectively. Some cases were successfully
treated with discontinuation of the biologic alone (32.8%), while others
required further treatment with corticosteroids or ustekinumab.We found TNF-α and IL-12/23 inhibitors were the most common biologics
associated with PsA development or worsening. Various hypotheses have been
proposed to mechanistically explain this paradoxical adverse reaction.
First, biologic agents lead to an imbalance in cytokine levels, resulting in
psoriatic joint inflammation.
Patients with PsA have increased levels of IL-12 and IL-23.
Furthermore, IL-23 is responsible for stimulating the production of
Th17 cells that are capable of acting as osteoclastogenic T
cells, which may result in erosive joint disease.
Second, some biologics may be less efficacious in the joints compared
to the skin, resulting in subclinical arthritis, which manifests as joint
inflammation without skin lesions.
Lastly, antinuclear antibodies (ANA) have reportedly been elevated by
anti-TNF antibodies.
Literature shows that 14% to 16% of patients being treated with
adalimumab have a rise or conversion in ANA titres, which are associated
with various autoimmune diseases such as PsA.
Similarly, a study by Pirowska et al. reported that elevated ANA in
patients with PsA was induced by all anti-TNF treatments including
infliximab, etanercept, and adalimumab.
By inhibiting the effects of TNF, anti-TNF antibodies induce the
production of interferon (IFN) from plasmacytoid dendritic cells.
IFN induction was shown to raise ANA levels and may, therefore,
contribute to the paradoxical PsA.Our systematic review found that improvements in PsA occurred after switching
to ustekinumab and adalimumab in 20.8% and 29.2% of patients, respectively.
Previous clinical trials reported greater efficacy for treatment of PsA with
these agents. For example, treatment with 90 mg of ustekinumab every 4 weeks
achieved an ACR20 (20% improvement based on criteria from the American
College of Rheumatology) response at 24 weeks in 42% of patients compared to
only 14% in the placebo group, with an absolute difference of 28% (CI
14.0–41.6, P < .001).
Other trials focusing on adalimumab reported similar outcomes.
A double‐blind study comparing adalimumab to placebo in patients with
PsA reported improvements in skin and joint manifestations following
biologic therapy.
At 48 weeks, patients treated with adalimumab achieved ACR20, ACR50,
and ACR70 responses at rates of 56%, 44%, and 30%, respectively.
The differences between efficacy observed in our study compared to
previous trials may be linked to heterogenous data, variable time of follow
up and harder to treat patients with refractory inflammatory conditions.In addition to being a paradoxical adverse effect of biologic treatment, PsA
development or exacerbation is a common complication in patients with
psoriasis suggesting an increased risk to develop this condition in our
patient cohort even prior to biologic treatment.
For instance, Alinaghi et al. reported the incidence of PsA to be
19.7% in patients with psoriasis and 25% for those with moderate to severe psoriasis.
In our systematic review, 87.0% of patients presented with psoriasis
prior to PsA development or exacerbation. Furthermore, a study by Carubbi et
al. reported an association between PsA and other inflammatory diseases
including Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, and rheumatoid arthritis.
Similarly, our study included patients with Crohn’s disease and
rheumatoid arthritis. As a result, it is important to note that patients may
have experienced new onset or worsening of PsA as a manifestation of
underlying diseases, with the onset or exacerbation secondary to biologic
use being coincidental.There are several important limitations in this systematic review. All
summarized cases were observational with small sample sizes and heterogenous
data, thereby limiting the collected data and generalizability of findings.
Since the mean Naranjo score was low (4.63), it may be difficult to conclude
causality between biologic use and PsA onset or exacerbation. Second, we
were not able to obtain additional information regarding family history and
comorbidities from the included studies. There were no re-challenge tests
performed and therefore it is unclear whether the biologic was associated
with PsA related adverse effects. Additionally, most patients included in
this review had underlying conditions that may have increased their risk of
developing PsA; it is therefore, possible that insufficient control of the
preexisting condition indicated for biologic use led to PsA related
complications. Alternatively, PsA onset could be idiopathic and independent
from the preexisting condition or the biologic use. It is also important to
note that the treatments highlighted in this manuscript are effective
treatments for PsA, but it is possible that breakthrough cases of PsA may be
included in the patient sample due to treatment failures. Ultimately,
further studies and large clinical trials are warranted to elucidate the
causality, pathophysiology and management strategies for patients that
develop or experience exacerbation of PsA while being treated with biologic
therapies.Despite these limitations, our systematic review suggests that TNF-α and
IL-12/23 inhibitors are the most common biologics associated with PsA. Given
the significant impact of PsA on the quality of life and function of the patients,
surveillance for PsA related complications in patients on biologic
therapy are important for timely diagnosis and optimal resolution outcomes.
Collaborative care between the dermatologist and rheumatologist should be
emphasized in diagnosing and managing patients who show any indication of
joint inflammation.Click here for additional data file.Supplemental material, Online supplementary file 1, for A Systematic
Review Characterizing Psoriatic Arthritis Onset and Exacerbation in
Patients Receiving Biologic Therapy by Muskaan Sachdeva, Abrahim
Abduelmula, Asfandyar Mufti, Jorge R. Georgakopoulos, Yuliya Lytvyn
and Jensen Yeung in Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and SurgeryClick here for additional data file.Supplemental material, Online supplementary file 2, for A Systematic
Review Characterizing Psoriatic Arthritis Onset and Exacerbation in
Patients Receiving Biologic Therapy by Muskaan Sachdeva, Abrahim
Abduelmula, Asfandyar Mufti, Jorge R. Georgakopoulos, Yuliya Lytvyn
and Jensen Yeung in Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and SurgeryClick here for additional data file.Supplemental material, Online supplementary file 3, for A Systematic
Review Characterizing Psoriatic Arthritis Onset and Exacerbation in
Patients Receiving Biologic Therapy by Muskaan Sachdeva, Abrahim
Abduelmula, Asfandyar Mufti, Jorge R. Georgakopoulos, Yuliya Lytvyn
and Jensen Yeung in Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and SurgeryClick here for additional data file.Supplemental material, Online supplementary file 4, for A Systematic
Review Characterizing Psoriatic Arthritis Onset and Exacerbation in
Patients Receiving Biologic Therapy by Muskaan Sachdeva, Abrahim
Abduelmula, Asfandyar Mufti, Jorge R. Georgakopoulos, Yuliya Lytvyn
and Jensen Yeung in Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery
Authors: Farzad Alinaghi; Monika Calov; Lars Erik Kristensen; Dafna D Gladman; Laura C Coates; Denis Jullien; Alice B Gottlieb; Paolo Gisondi; Jashin J Wu; Jacob P Thyssen; Alexander Egeberg Journal: J Am Acad Dermatol Date: 2018-06-19 Impact factor: 11.527
Authors: F Carubbi; M S Chimenti; G Blasetti; P Cipriani; A Musto; M C Fargnoli; R Perricone; R Giacomelli; K Peris Journal: J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol Date: 2015-04-16 Impact factor: 6.166
Authors: Floranne C Wilson; Murat Icen; Cynthia S Crowson; Marian T McEvoy; Sherine E Gabriel; Hilal Maradit Kremers Journal: J Rheumatol Date: 2009-01-22 Impact factor: 4.666
Authors: Magdalena M Pirowska; Anna Goździalska; Sylwia Lipko-Godlewska; Aleksander Obtułowicz; Joanna Sułowicz; Katarzyna Podolec; Anna Wojas-Pelc Journal: Postepy Dermatol Alergol Date: 2015-08-12 Impact factor: 1.837