| Literature DB >> 35853771 |
Emek Kocatürk1, Emel Bülbül Başkan2, Özlem Su Küçük3, Mustafa Özdemir4, Sinem Örnek5, Pelin Kuteyla Can6, Eda Haşal2, Burhan Engin7, Nilgün Atakan8, Erkan Alpsoy9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria (CSU) is characterized by recurrent wheals and/or angioedema for longer than 6-weeks. Guidelines recommend Omalizumab (Oma) as first-line and Cyclosporine-A (Cs-A) as second-line treatment in antihistamine resistant CSU. This step-wise algorithm might be time-consuming and costly.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Chronic urticaria; Cyclosporine; Omalizumab
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35853771 PMCID: PMC9453514 DOI: 10.1016/j.abd.2022.03.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: An Bras Dermatol ISSN: 0365-0596 Impact factor: 2.113
Demographic and clinical characteristics of the patients.
| Demographic and clinical parameters | Total (n = 110, %) | Oma responders (n = 47, 42.7%) | Cs-A responders (n = 15, 13.6%) | Both Oma and Cs-A responders (n = 24, 21.8%) | Non-responders (n = 24, 21.8%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age in years | |||||
| Min‒Max (Median) | 16‒81 (39) | 27‒81 (42) | 16‒73 (37) | 21‒66 (34.5) | 20‒69 (37) |
| Mean ± SD | 40.98 ± 12.37 | 43.32 ± 10.67 | 40.20 ± 16.52 | 37.79 ± 12.18 | 40.08 ± 12.64 |
| Gender n (%) | |||||
| Male | 36 (32.7%) | 18 (38.3%) | 6 (40%) | 9 (37.5) | 3 (12.5) |
| Female | 74 (67.3%) | 29 (61.7%) | 9 (60%) | 15 (62.5%) | 21 (87.5%) |
| Accompanying CINDU n (%) | n = 99 | n = 43 | n = 15 | n = 17 | n = 24 |
| 21 (21.2%) | 9 (20.9%) | 3 (20%) | 3 (17.6%) | 6 (25%) | |
| Disease duration (months) | |||||
| Min‒Max (Median) | 0‒402 (30) | 2‒300 (30) | 3‒120 (36) | 0‒264 (25) | 5‒402 (36) |
| Mean ± SD | 57.21 ± 69.31 | 60.32 ± 71.26 | 45.53 ± 38.33 | 51.46 ± 63.72 | 64.17 ± 86.37 |
| Angioedema, n (%) | 62 (56.4%) | 27 (57.4%) | 10 (66.7%) | 8 (33.3%) | 17 (70.8%) |
| Baseline UCT | n = 83 | n = 41 | n = 8 | n = 16 | n = 18 |
| Min‒Max (Median) | 0‒16 (6) | 1‒16 (6) | 2‒9 (3) | 3‒16 (8) | 0‒11 (5) |
| Mean ± SD | 7 ± 4.34 | 7.44 ± 4.65 | 4.75 ± 3.06 | 9.12 ± 3.81 | 5.11 ± 3.53 |
| UCT ≥ 6 | 46 (55.4%) | 23 (56.1%) | 3 (37.5%) | 13 (81.2%) | 7 (38.9%) |
| UCT < 6 | 37 (44.6%) | 18 (43.9%) | 5 (62.5%) | 3 (18.8%) | 11 (61.1%) |
| Positive family history n (%) | 11 (10%) | 2 (4.3%) | 3 (20%) | 3 (12.5%) | 3 (12.5%) |
CINDU, Chronic Inducible Urticaria; UCT, Urticaria Control Test.
Figure 1The distribution of four types of treatment responses.
Laboratory findings of the patients shown for each group.
| Laboratory finding | Total (n = 110, %) | Oma (only) responder (n = 47, 42.7%) | Cs-A (only) responder (n = 15, 13.6%) | Both oma and Cs-A responder (n = 24, 21.8%) | Non-responder (n = 24, 21.8%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High levels of CRP | n = 88 | n = 38 | n = 11 | n = 21 | n = 18 |
| 39 (44.3%) | 16 (42.1%) | 8 (72.7%) | 7 (33.3%) | 8 (44.4%) | |
| High levels of ESR | n = 99 | n = 44 | n = 13 | n = 21 | n = 21 |
| 39 (39.4%) | 15 (34.1%) | 8 (61.5%) | 9 (42.9%) | 7 (33.3%) | |
| Eosinopenia | n = 54 | n = 23 | n = 10 | n = 9 | n = 12 |
| 3 (5.6%) | 0 | 2 (20%) | 0 | 1 (8.3%) | |
| Basipodia | n = 102 | n = 46 | n = 12 | n = 24 | n = 20 |
| 4 (3.9%) | 1 (2.2%) | 2 (16.7%) | 0 | 1 (5%) | |
| ASST positivity | n = 77 | n = 36 | n = 7 | n = 17 | n = 17 |
| 44 (57.1%) | 19 (52.8%) | 5 (71.4%) | 10 (58.8%) | 10 (58.8%) | |
| Serum total IgE levels (IU/mL) | 2,03‒6350 (167) | 3,28‒6350 (169) | 2,03‒1282 (280) | 6,4 3‒16 06 (150) | 9‒1434 (172) |
| 370.65 ± 727.22 | 476.35 ± 1000.81 | 343.27 ± 392.27 | 252.58 ± 368.81 | 271.05 ± 328.70 | |
| Serum total IgE levels lower than 43 (IU/mL) | n = 94 | n = 43 | n = 12 | n = 18 | n = 21 |
| 23 (24.5%) | 9 (20.9%) | 5 (41.7%) | 3 (16.7%) | 6 (28.6%) | |
| Autoimmune thyroid disease | n = 81 | n = 35 | n = 9 | n = 20 | n = 17 |
| 17 (21%) | 8 (22.9%) | 2 (22.2%) | 2 (10%) | 5 (29.4%) | |
| High levels of anti-TPO antibody n (%) | n = 72 | n = 29 | n = 8 | n = 19 | n = 16 |
| 25 (34.7%) | 11 (37.9%) | 4 (50%) | 4 (21.1%) | 6 (37.5%) | |
| High levels of anti-TG antibody n (%) | n = 66 | n = 25 | n = 8 | n = 19 | n = 14 |
| 18 (27.3%) | 8 (32%) | 2 (25%) | 3 (15.8%) | 5 (35.7%) | |
| Positive H.pylori antigen in stool n (%) | n = 87 | n = 41 | n = 12 | n = 19 | n = 15 |
| 31 (35,6%) | 13 (31,7%) | 4 (33,3%) | 7 (36,8%) | 7 (46,7%) |
anti-TG, anti-Thyroglobulin antibody; anti-TPO, anti-Thyroid Peroxidase antibody; CRP, C-Reactive Protein; ESR, Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate; H. pylori, Helicobacter pylori; ASST, Autologous Serum Skin Test.
Demonstration of statistically significant and statistically no-significant but more frequent features observed between the treatment response groups.
| Treatment group | p < 0.05 | p > 0.05 |
|---|---|---|
| Oma (only) responders vs. Cs-A (only) responders | None | More frequent in Cs-A responders: Positive ASST, positive family history, high CRP, basopenia, eosinopenia, high ESR, low total IgE levels, anti-TPO positivity, lower baseline UCT scores |
| Oma responders vs. oma-non-responders | Higher in oma responders: Baseline UCT score | More frequent in Oma-responders: Male gender, lower rates of ASST positivity, lower rates of family history, lower frequency of high CRP, lower frequency of eosinopenia, lower frequency of basopenia, lower frequency of high ESR levels, lower frequency of angioedema, lower frequency of autoimmune thyroid disease, higher frequency of total IgE levels greater than 43 |
| Cs-A responders vs. Cs-A-non-responders | More frequent in Cs-A responders: High CRP | More frequent in Cs-A responders: Positive family history, positive ASST, eosinopenia, basopenia, high ESR levels, lower total IgE levels, anti-TPO positivity, lower baseline UCT scores |
| Responders to both drugs vs. other three groups | More frequent in both drug responders: Lower angioedema frequency, higher baseline UCT | Less frequent in both drug responders: High CRP, eosinopenia, basopenia, autoimmune thyroid disease, anti-TPO positivity, anti-TG positivity |
| Non-responders to either drug vs. other three groups | Higher frequency in non-responders: Female gender, lower baseline UCT | Higher frequency in non-responders: Angioedema, autoimmune thyroid disease, anti-TG positivity, |
| Cs-A responders vs. Cs-A-non-responders | More frequent in Cs-A responders: High CRP | More frequent in Cs-A responders: Positive family history, positive ASST, eosinopenia, basopenia, high ESR levels, lower total IgE levels, anti-TPO positivity, lower baseline UCT scores |
anti-TPO, anti-Thyroid Peroxidase antibody; anti-TG, anti-Thyroglobulin antibody; ASST, Autologous Serum Skin Test; CRP, C-Reactive Protein; Cs-A, Cyclosporine-A; ESR, Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate; H.pylori, Helicobacter pylori; Oma, Omalizumab; UCT, Urticaria Control Test.
What is already known about the topic, what does this article add?
| What is already known about the topic? | What does this article add? |
|---|---|
| Autoimmunity in CSU has been classified into type 1 autoimmune (IgE type-autoallergic) and type 2b autoimmune (IgG type) mechanisms. These two types have been associated with different clinical and laboratory features and treatment response patterns. Type 1 autoimmune urticaria is associated with IgE antibodies against autoantigens, higher rates of concomitant allergic diseases, normal or high total IgE levels and high response rates to omalizumab. Type 2b autoimmune urticaria is associated with IgG antibodies against autoantigens, BHRA, BAT, ASST positivity, more severe disease with longer duration, higher rates of concomitant autoimmune diseases, higher rates of basopenia and eosinopenia, lower total IgE levels, higher CRP levels, higher ANA positivity, low response rates to antihistamines and omalizumab, higher response rates to immunosuppressive therapy. | We found two distinct patterns of CSU endotypes according to their treatment response patterns which are compatible with the two different autoimmune urticaria endotypes; Oma responders tended to be more male gender with a lower disease activity (higher baseline UCT scores) and with lower rates of ASST positivity, lower rates of family history, lower CRP levels, lower rates of basopenia and eosinopenia, lower ESR levels, lower frequency of angioedema, lower frequency of autoimmune thyroid disease and higher total IgE levels. These are features that have been linked to type 1 (IgE type) autoimmunity. Cs-A responders had higher CRP levels and higher frequency of positive family history, positive ASST, eosinopenia, basopenia, higher ESR levels, higher frequency of anti-TPO positivity, lower total IgE levels and higher disease activity (lower baseline UCT scores). These are features that have been linked to type 2b (IgG type) autoimmunity. |
| Biomarkers for Oma response has been reported to be high levels of total IgE, ASST negativity, BHRA negativity, lack of basophil CD203c-upregulating activity, high expression of basophil FcεRI and lower IL-31 levels while biomarkers for cyclosporine response has been reported to be BHRA positivity, higher CRP levels, low total IgE levels, ASST positivity, low D-dimer levels, high disease activity and short disease duration | Non-responders to either drugs are more female with higher disease activity and with more angioedema, autoimmune thyroid disease, thyroid autoantibodies and |
anti-TPO, anti-Thyroid Peroxidase antibody; anti-TG, anti-Thyroglobulin antibody; ASST, Autologous Serum Skin Test; BAT, Basophil Activation Test; BHRA, Basophil Histamine Release Assay; CRP, C-Reactive Protein; Cs-A, Cyclosporine-A; CSU, Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria; ESR, Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate; H.pylori, Helicobacterpylori; Oma, Omalizumab; UCT, Urticaria Control Test.