| Literature DB >> 35686132 |
Gloria Orlando1,2, Barbara Molon2,3, Antonella Viola2,3, Mauro Alaibac1, Roberta Angioni2,3, Stefano Piaserico1.
Abstract
Psoriasis is a chronic immune-mediated inflammatory skin disease, characterized by well-demarcated scaly, erythematous, infiltrated plaques. The cutaneous-to-systemic expansion of the inflammation in psoriasis leads to the concept of "psoriatic march" or "inflammatory skin march". Accordingly, psoriasis is thought to be a systemic inflammatory disease associated with numerous comorbidities. Indeed, it's currently considered an independent risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. Here, we discuss the current knowledge on TNF-α and IL-23/IL-17 mediated pathways linking the psoriatic plaque to the cardiovascular compartment. We further argue the possible involvement of the endothelial compartment in the psoriatic plaque- cardiovascular system crosstalk.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular diseases; cytokines; endothelial dysfunction (ED); inflammation; psoriasis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35686132 PMCID: PMC9170986 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.868277
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Summary of systemic reviews and meta-analysis analyzing the association between psoriasis and traditional cardiovascular risk factors.
| References | Study population | Traditional cardiovascular risk factors and relative risk of measures |
|---|---|---|
| Armsrong et al., ( | Psoriasis: 20831 | Obesity OR 1.66 (1.46-1.89); mild psoriasis OR 1.46 |
| Armstrong et al., ( | Psoriasis: 309469 | Hypertension: all psoriasis, OR = 1.58 (1.42–1.76); mild psoriasis, OR = 1.30 (1.15–1.47); severe psoriasis, OR = 1.49 (1.20–1.86) |
| Ma et al., ( | Psoriasis: 238385 | Dyslipidemia OR (1.04-5.05) |
| Armstrong et al., ( | Psoriasis: 314036 | Diabetes OR 1.59 (1.38–1.83); mild psoriasis pooled |
| Armstrong et al., ( | Psoriasis: 41853 | Metabolic syndrome OR 2.26 (1.70–3.01) |
| Coto-Segura et al., ( | Psoriasis: 557697 | Type 2 diabetes pooled OR 1.76 (1.59–1.96) |
| Miller at al., ( | Psoriasis: 503686 | Diabetes OR 1.9 (1.5–2.5); hypertension OR 1.8 |
| Rodriguez-Zuniga et al., ( | Psoriasis: 25042 | Metabolic syndrome pooled OR 1.42 (1.28–1.65) |
| Singh et al., ( | Psoriasis: 46714 | Metabolic syndrome pooled OR 2.14 (1.84–2.48) |
| Mamizadeh et al., ( | Psoriasis: 922870 | Diabetes OR 1.69 (1.51–1.89) |
| Choudhary et al., ( | Psoriasis: 15939 | Metabolic syndrome OR 2.077 (1.84–2.34) |
| Choudhary et al., ( | Psoriasis: 17672 | Increased systolic blood pressure OR 2.31 (1.12–4.74); |
| Phan et al., ( | Pediatric psoriasis: 43808 | Obesity OR 2.45 (1.73–3.48); diabetes OR 2.32 |
| Duan et al., ( | Psoriasis: 255132 | Hypertension OR 1.43 (1.25–1.64) |
| Cho et al., ( | Pediatric psoriasis: 20676 | Obesity pooled OR 2.4 (1.6-3.59); diabetes OR 2.01 (1.09-3.73); hypertension OR 2.73 (1.79-4.17); dyslipidemia OR 1.67 (1.42-1.97); metabolic syndrome OR 7.49 (1.86-30.07) |
OR, odds ratio. Values in brackets indicate 95% confidence intervals.
Summary of systemic reviews and meta-analysis assessing the risk of cardiovascular diseases in psoriasis.
| References | Study population | CV outcomes and relative risk of measures |
|---|---|---|
| Xu et al., ( | Psoriasis: 326598 | MI and stroke RR 1.2 (1.1-1.31); MI RR 1.22 (1.05-1.42; Stroke RR 1.21 (1.04-1.40) |
| Armstrong et al., ( | Psoriasis: 218654 (mild 201239; severe 17415) | Mild Psoriasis: MI RR 1.29 (1.02–1.63), stroke RR 1.12 (1.08–1.16) |
| Gaeta et al., ( | Psoriasis: 1862297 | Overall CV RR 1.24 (1.18–1.31), MI RR 1.24 (1.11–1.39) |
| Gu et al., ( | Psoriasis and controls: 6230774 | Stroke RR 1.26 (1.12–1.41) |
| Horreau et al., 2013 ( | Psoriasis: 324650 | Cohort studies: MI OR 1.25 (1.03–1.52), CAD OR 1.20 (1.13–1.27), |
| Miller et al., ( | Psoriasis: 503686 | Overall CVD OR 1.4 (1.2–1.7) |
| Pietrzak et al., ( | Psoriasis: 367358 | CV events OR 1.28 (1.18–1.38) |
| Samarasasekera et al., ( | Psoriasis: 488315 (mild: 327418; severe: 12854) | All psoriasis: MI HR 1.40 (1.03–1.89), stroke HR 1.13 (1.01–1.26) |
| Richard et al., ( | NA | Cohort studies: MI OR = 1.25 (1.03-1.52); CAD1.20 (1.13-1.27); |
| Raaby et al., ( | NA | Mild psoriasis: MI HR 1.2 (1.06-1.35); stroke HR 1.10 (1.0-1.19); CV death HR 1.06 (0.90-1.24) |
| Dhana et al., ( | Psoriasis: 285675 | All psoriasis: CV mortality pooler RR 1.15 (1.09-1.21); mild psoriasis: CV mortality pooled RR 1.05 (0.92-1.20); severe psoriasis: CV mortality pooled RR 1.38 (1.09-1.74) |
| Phan et al., ( | Pediatric psoriasis: 43808 | IHD or HF OR 3.15 (1.06-9.42) |
CAD, coronary artery disease; CV, cardiovascular; HF, heart failure; HR, hazard ratio; IHD, ischemic heart disease; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events; MI, myocardial infarction; OR, odds ratio; RR, relative risk; SMR, standardized mortality ratio. Values in brackets indicate 95% confidence intervals. NA, not applicable.
Psoriasis and cardiovascular diseases comorbidity strength of recommendation and level of evidence.
| Recommendation | Strength of recommendation | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Risk assessment | B | II-III |
| Screening | B | II-III |
| Risk score models | C | II-III |
| Risk management | C | III |
Figure 1The immune-mediated pathogenetic link between psoriasis and cardiovascular disorders: triggering the endothelial dysfunction. In the psoriatic plaque, immune cells, including Th17 promote the generation and release of circulating inflammatory mediators as IL-17 and TNF-α. TNF-α caused NF-κB activation, subsequently leading to increased expression of multiple pro-inflammatory cytokines in the psoriatic skin. In endothelial cells, IL-17A receptor drives the production of TNF-α, IL-1β, CCL2, and the expression of ICAM- 1 leading to the endothelial dysfunction involved in the pathophysiology of multiple immune-mediated CVDs. The IL-17 also triggers the accumulation of ROS, in particular within the endothelium further contributing to endothelial dysfunction and CVD progression.