New Insight into the Molecular Pathomechanism and Immunomodulatory Treatments of Hidradenitis Suppurativa
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Pathogenesis of HS
3. TNF-α Generality and Role in HS Pathogenesis
3.1. Adalimumab
3.2. Infliximab
3.3. Certolizumab Pegol
3.4. Etanercept
3.5. Golimumab
3.6. IL-17 Generality and Role in HS Pathogenesis
3.7. Secukinumab
3.8. Brodalumab
3.9. Ixekizumab
3.10. Bimekizumab
3.11. IL 23
3.12. Ustekinumab
3.13. Guselkumab
3.14. Risankizumab
3.15. Tildrakizumab
3.16. IL1
3.17. Anakinra
3.18. Bermekimab
3.19. Canakinumab
3.20. IL36
3.21. Spesolimab
3.22. Imsidolimab (ANB019)
Drug | Study | Patients and Dose | Results |
---|---|---|---|
TNFα | |||
Adalimumab | |||
Kimball et al., 2016 [86] | PIONEER I (n = 307) Adalimumab 40 mg/week s.c. (n = 153) Placebo s.c. (n = 154) PIONEER II (n = 326) Adalimumab 40 mg/week s.c. (n = 163) Placebo s.c. (n = 163) | 41.8% reached an HiSCR after 12 weeks 26.0% reached an HiSCR after 12 weeks 58.9% reached an HiSCR after 12 weeks 27.6% reached an HiSCR after 12 weeks | |
Zouboulis et al., 2019 [87] | Open-label extension (OLE) trial (n = 151) Adalimumab 40 mg/week s.c. | An HiSCR was achieved in 52% of patients at week 168 | |
Marzano et al., 2021 [25] | Retrospective, real-life multicenter cohort study (n = 389) Adalimumab 160 mg s.c. at week 0, 80 mg at week 2 and 40 mg weekly starting at week 4 | An HiSCR was achieved in 43.7% at week 16 and in 53.9% at week 52 | |
Infliximab | |||
Grant et al., 2010 [89] | Phase II placebo-controlled, double-blind RCT (n = 38) Infliximab 5 mg/kg i.v. at weeks 0, 2, 4, 6, 14 and 22 (n = 15) Placebo i.v. (n = 23) | >50% decrease in HSSI reached in 27% at week 8 >50% decrease in HSSI reached in 5% at week 8 | |
Mekkes et al., 2008 [90] | Long-term efficacy study (n = 10) Single course of infliximab (three intravenous infusions at weeks 0, 2 and 6) | 3/10 reported no relapse at 2-year follow-up 7/20 showed recurrence after 8.5 months | |
Oskardmay et al., 2019 [91] | Retrospective cohort study (n = 52) Infliximab 10 mg/kg i.v. every 6 or 8 weeks | 67% of the patients achieved HS stability | |
Van Rappard et al., 2012 [92] | Retrospective comparative study (n = 20) Infliximab i.v., 3 infusions of 5 mg/kg at weeks 0, 2 and 6 Adalimumab s.c. 40 mg every other week | Average Sartorius score was reduced to 54% of baseline Average Sartorius score was reduced to 66% of baseline | |
Certolizumab pegol | |||
Sand et al., 2015 [94] | Retrospective study (n = 2) Certolizumab pegol 200 mg s.c. every 2 weeks | Inefficacy with low dosage certolizumab | |
Holm et al., 2020 [95]; Esme et al., 2020 [95]; Wohlmuth-Wieser et al., 2020 [97] | Case reports (n = 3) Certolizumab pegol 400 mg every other week or 200 mg every week | Satisfactory response to certolizumab | |
Etanercept | |||
Giamarellos-Bourboulis et al., 2008 [99] | Prospective open-label phase II study (n = 10) Etanercept 50 mg s.c. once weekly for 12 weeks | >50% decrease in disease activity in 7 patients at week 24 | |
Pelekanou et al., 2010 [100] | Open-label phase II prospective trial (long term efficacy study) (n = 10) Etanercept 50 mg s.c. once weekly for 12 weeks | 3/10 did not report any disease recurrence 7/10 needed a second course of treatment, of which 5 had favorable response and 2 were not successfully treated | |
Cusack et al., 2006 [101] | Open-label study (n = 6) Etanercept 25 mg s.c. twice weekly | Mean reduction of 61% in self-reported disease activity at 24 weeks Mean reduction of 64% in DLQI scores at 24 weeks | |
Sotiriou et al., 2009 [102] | Open label study (n = 4) Etanercept 25 mg s.c. twice weekly | 68.75% mean self-reported improvement at 6 months follow-up Mean reduction of 66.5% in DLQI scores at 6 months follow-up | |
Adams et al., 2010 [103] | Randomized double-blind trial (n = 20) Etanercept s.c. 50 mg every other week (n = 10) Placebo s.c. (n = 10) | No statistically significant difference between etanercept and placebo groups in PGA and DLQI | |
Golimumab | |||
van der Zee et al., 2013 [105];; Tursi et al., 2016 [106]; Ramos et al., 2022 [107] | Case reports (n = 4) Golimumab 50 mg s.c. every 4 weeks Golimumab 200 mg s.c. at week 0 and 100 mg every 4 weeks | No clinical improvement Successful results with decrease in IHS4 | |
IL-17 | |||
Secukinumab | |||
Thorlacius et al., 2018 [120]; Schuch et al., 2018 [121]; Jørgensen et al., 2016 [122]; Głowaczewska et al., 2020 [123]; Villegas-Romero et al., 2020 [124]; Chiricozzi et al., 2020 [125] | Case reports (n = 8) Secukinumab 300 mg s.c. weekly for 5 weeks, then every 4 weeks | Successful response to secukinumab | |
Prussick et al., 2019 [126] | Open-label, single-arm, pilot trial (n = 9) Secukinumab 300 mg s.c. weekly for 5 weeks, then every 4 weeks | An HiSCR was achieved in 67% at week 24 | |
Casseres et al., 2020 [127] | Open-label, single-arm pilot trial (n = 20) Secukinumab 300 mg s.c. weekly for 5 weeks, then for 9 patients 300 mg s.c. every 4 weeks, and for 11 patients 300 mg s.c. every 2 weeks | An HiSCR was achieved in 70% at week 24 | |
Reguiaï et al., 2020 [128] | Retrospective study (n = 20) Secukinumab 300 mg s.c. weekly for 5 weeks, then every 4 weeks | An HiSCR was achieved in 75% at week 16 | |
Ribero et al., 2021 [129] | Multicentric retrospective study (n = 31) Secukinumab 300 mg s.c. weekly for 5 weeks, then every 4 weeks | An HiSCR was achieved in 41% at week 28 | |
NCT03713619 [130], NCT03713632 [131], NCT04179175 [132] | Phase III RCTs | Still ongoing | |
Brodalumab | |||
Tampouratzi et al., 2019 [134]; Yoshida et al., 2021 [135]; Arenbergerova et al., 2020 [136] | Case reports (n = 3) Brodalumab 210 mg s.c. at weeks 0, 1 and 2, then 210 mg every 2 weeks | Successful response to brodalumab | |
Frew et al., 2020 [137] | Open-label cohort study (n = 10) Brodalumab 210 mg s.c. at weeks 0, 1 and 2, then 210 mg every 2 weeks | 100% achieved an HiSCR at week 12 | |
Frew et al., 2021 [138] | Open-label cohort study (n = 10) Brodalumab 210 mg s.c. every 2 weeks | 100% achieved an HiSCR at week 4 | |
NCT04979520 [139] | Phase III RCTs | Still ongoing | |
Ixekizumab | |||
Odorici et al., 2020 [141]; Megna et al., 2020 [142]; Reardon et al., 2021 [143] | Case reports (n = 3) Ixekizumab 160 mg s.c. at week 0; 80 mg at weeks 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 and then every 4 weeks | Successful response to ixekizumab | |
Esme et al., 2022 [144] | Case series (n = 5) Ixekizumab 160 mg s.c. at week 0; 80 mg at weeks 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 | 80% achieved an HiSCR at week 12 | |
Bimekizumab | |||
Glatt et al., 2021 [146] | Phase II, double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial (n = 90) Bimekizumab 640 mg s.c. at week 0 and 320 mg every 2 weeks Placebo s.c. Adalimumab 160 mg at week 0, 80 mg at week 2 and 40 mg every week after | 57.3% achieved an HiSCR at week 12 26.1% achieved an HiSCR at week 12 60% achieved an HiSCR at week 12 | |
NCT04242446 [147]; NCT04242498 [148]; NCT04901195 [149] | Phase III RCTs | Still ongoing | |
IL-12/23 | |||
Ustekinumab | |||
Montero-Vilchez et al., 2022 [158]; Valenzuela-Ubiña et al., 2020 [159] | Case series (n = 20) Ustekinumab 90 mg s.c. every 2 months | Successful response to ustekinumab | |
Blok et al., 2016 [115] | Phase II open-label study (n = 17) Ustekinumab 45 mg s.c. if <90 kg and 90 mg s.c. if >90 kg at weeks 0, 4, 16 and 28 | 47% achieved an HiSCR at week 40 | |
Romaní et al., 2020 [160] | Retrospective multicenter study (n = 14) Ustekinumab i.v. weight-adjusted induction dose (≤55 kg, 260 mg; 56–85 kg, 390 mg; ≥86 kg, 520 mg) then 90 mg s.c. every 8 weeks | 50% achieved an HiSCR at week 16 | |
Sánchez-Martínez et al., 2020 [161] | Retrospective unicenter study (n = 6) Ustekinumab i.v. weight-adjusted induction dose (≤55 kg, 260 mg; 56–85 kg, 390 mg; ≥86 kg, 520 mg), then 90 mg s.c. every 8 weeks | 50% achieved an HiSCR at week 12 | |
IL-23 | |||
Guselkumab | |||
Kearney et al., 2020 [163]; Kovacs et al., 2019 [164]; Casseres et al., 2019 [165]; Berman et al., 2021 [166]; Jørgensen et al., 2020 [167] | Case reports and case series (n = 14) Guselkumab 100 mg s.c. at week 0 and week 4 then every 8 weeks | Successful response to Guselkumab | |
Melgosa Ramos et al., 2022 [168] | Retrospective bicentric study (n = 11) Guselkumab 100 mg s.c. at week 0 and week 4 then every 8 weeks; then, for 6 patients, 100 mg every 6 weeks to maintain an HiSCR | 63.6% achieved an HiSCR at week 16 | |
Montero-Vilchez et al., 2020 [169] | Case series (n = 4) Guselkumab 100 mg s.c. at week 0 and then every 4 weeks | 50% had moderate reduction in IHS4, VAS for pain and DLQI | |
NCT0368924 [170] | Phase II placebo-controlled, double-blind study Guselkumab 200 mg at weeks 0, 4, 8 and 12 Guselkumab 1200 mg i.v. at weeks 0, 4 and 8, then 200 mg s.c. starting from week 12 Placebo | 50% achieved an HiSCR at week 16 45% achieved an HiSCR at week 16 38% achieved an HiSCR at week 16 | |
Risankizumab | |||
Marques et al., 2021 [172]; Caposiena et al., 2021 [173]; Licata et al., 2021 [174] | Case reports (n = 4) Risankizumab 150 mg s.c. at weeks 0 and 4, followed by 150 mg s.c. every 12 weeks | Successful response to Risankizumab | |
Repetto et al., 2022 [175] | Case series (n = 6) Risankizumab 150 mg s.c. at weeks 0 and 4, followed by 150 mg s.c. every 12 weeks | 50% achieved an HiSCR at month 3 and 100% achieved an HiSCR at month 6 | |
NCT03926169 [176] | Phase II placebo-controlled study | Still ongoing | |
Tildrakizumab | |||
Kok et al., 2020 [178]; Kok et al., 2021 [179] | Case series (n = 9) Tildrakizumab 100 mg s.c. at weeks 0 and 4 and then 200 mg every 4 weeks | 100% achieved an HiSCR Reduction in mean AN count of 23.50 from baseline observed at month 15 | |
IL-1 | |||
Anakinra | |||
Tzanetakou et al., 2016 [193] | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled prospective clinical trial (n = 20) Anakinra 100 mg s.c. daily for 12 weeks (n = 10) Placebo s.c. (n = 10) | 78% achieved an HiSCR at week 12 30% achieved an HiSCR at week 12 After a 12-week observation period, the HiSCR difference between the groups was not significant | |
Leslie et al., 2014 [194] | Open-label phase II study (n = 6) Anakinra 100 mg s.c. daily for 8 weeks | Mean decrease of 34.8 points in modified Sartorius score. All patients experienced a rebound during an 8-week follow-up off-therapy period. | |
Zarchi et al., 2013 [195]; van der Zee et al., 2013 [105]; Russo et al., 2016 [196]; Menis et al., 2015 [197] | Case reports (n= 5) Anakinra 100 mg s.c. daily | 1 successful response to anakinra 4 failures in response to anakinra | |
Bermekimab | |||
Kanni et al., 2018 [199] | Phase II placebo-controlled, double-blind RCT (NCT02643654) (n = 10) Bermekimab 7.5 mg/kg i.v. every other week Placebo i.v. | 60% achieved an HiSCR at week 12 10% achieved an HiSCR at week 12 | |
Kanni et al., 2021 [200] | Open-label extension of NCT02643654 (n = 8) Bermekimab 7.5 mg/kg i.v. every other week | 75% achieved an HiSCR at week 12 | |
Gottlieb et al., 2020 [201] | Phase II multicenter open label study (n = 42) Bermekimab 400 mg s.c. weekly | 61% of anti-TNF naïve patients achieved an HiSCR at week 12 63% of anti-TNF failure patients achieved an HiSCR at week 12 | |
NCT04988308 [202] | Phase IIa/IIb, multicenter, randomized, placebo- and active comparator-controlled, double-blind, dose-ranging study | Still ongoing | |
Canakinumab | |||
Houriet et al., 2017 [204]; Jaeger et al., 2013 [205]; Tekin et al., 2017 [206]; Sun et al., 2017 [207] | Case reports (n = 6) Canakinumab 150 mg s.c. at day 1, then monthly Canakinumab 150 mg s.c. at day 1, day 15, then monthly Canakinumab 150 mg every week/4 weeks/8 week | 3 successful responses to canakinumab 3 failures in response to canakinumab | |
IL-36 | |||
Spesolimab | |||
NCT04762277 [218] | Phase II placebo-controlled, double-blind RCT | Still ongoing | |
Imsidolimab (ANB019) | |||
NCT04856930 [219] | Phase II placebo-controlled, double-blind RCT | Still ongoing |
3.23. IL6
3.24. IL22
3.25. INF
4. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Molinelli, E.; Gioacchini, H.; Sapigni, C.; Diotallevi, F.; Brisigotti, V.; Rizzetto, G.; Offidani, A.; Simonetti, O. New Insight into the Molecular Pathomechanism and Immunomodulatory Treatments of Hidradenitis Suppurativa. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2023, 24, 8428. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24098428
Molinelli E, Gioacchini H, Sapigni C, Diotallevi F, Brisigotti V, Rizzetto G, Offidani A, Simonetti O. New Insight into the Molecular Pathomechanism and Immunomodulatory Treatments of Hidradenitis Suppurativa. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2023; 24(9):8428. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24098428
Chicago/Turabian StyleMolinelli, Elisa, Helena Gioacchini, Claudia Sapigni, Federico Diotallevi, Valerio Brisigotti, Giulio Rizzetto, Annamaria Offidani, and Oriana Simonetti. 2023. "New Insight into the Molecular Pathomechanism and Immunomodulatory Treatments of Hidradenitis Suppurativa" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 24, no. 9: 8428. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24098428
APA StyleMolinelli, E., Gioacchini, H., Sapigni, C., Diotallevi, F., Brisigotti, V., Rizzetto, G., Offidani, A., & Simonetti, O. (2023). New Insight into the Molecular Pathomechanism and Immunomodulatory Treatments of Hidradenitis Suppurativa. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 24(9), 8428. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24098428