Evidence that a neutrophil–keratinocyte crosstalk is an early target of <scp>IL</scp>‐17A inhibition in psoriasis

Kristian Reich(Dermatologikum Hamburg), Kim Papp(Probity Medical Research), Robert Matheson(Oregon Medical Research Center), John H. Tu(Search), Robert Bissonnette(Innovaderm (Canada)), Marc Bourcier(Moncton Hospital), David Gratton(AV&R (Canada)), Rodion A. Kunynetz(Barrie Urology Group), Yves Poulin(Centre de Recherche Dermatologique du Québec Métropolitain), Les Rosoph(Innovation Initiatives Ontario North), Georg Stingl(Medical University of Vienna), Wolfgang Bauer(Medical University of Vienna), Janeen Salter(Novartis (Switzerland)), Thomas Falk(Dermatologikum Hamburg), Norbert Blödorn‐Schlicht(Dermatologikum Hamburg), Wolfgang Hueber(Novartis (Switzerland)), Ülrike Sommer(Novartis (Switzerland)), M. Schumacher(Novartis (Switzerland)), Thomas Peters(Novartis (Switzerland)), Ernst Kriehuber(Novartis (Switzerland)), David M. Lee(Novartis (Switzerland)), Grazyna Wieczorek(Novartis (Switzerland)), Frank Kolbinger(Novartis (Switzerland)), Conrad C. Bleul(Novartis (Switzerland))
Experimental Dermatology
April 2, 2015
Cited by 200Open Access
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Abstract

The response of psoriasis to antibodies targeting the interleukin (IL)-23/IL-17A pathway suggests a prominent role of T-helper type-17 (Th17) cells in this disease. We examined the clinical and immunological response patterns of 100 subjects with moderate-to-severe psoriasis receiving 3 different intravenous dosing regimens of the anti-IL-17A antibody secukinumab (1 × 3 mg/kg or 1 × 10 mg/kg on Day 1, or 3 × 10 mg/kg on Days 1, 15 and 29) or placebo in a phase 2 trial. Baseline biopsies revealed typical features of active psoriasis, including epidermal accumulation of neutrophils and formation of microabscesses in >60% of cases. Neutrophils were the numerically largest fraction of infiltrating cells containing IL-17 and may store the cytokine preformed, as IL-17A mRNA was not detectable in neutrophils isolated from active plaques. Significant clinical responses to secukinumab were observed 2 weeks after a single infusion, associated with extensive clearance of cutaneous neutrophils parallel to the normalization of keratinocyte abnormalities and reduction of IL-17-inducible neutrophil chemoattractants (e.g. CXCL1, CXCL8); effects on numbers of T cells and CD11c-positive dendritic cells were more delayed. Histological and immunological improvements were generally dose dependent and not observed in the placebo group. In the lowest-dose group, a recurrence of neutrophils was seen in some subjects at Week 12; these subjects relapsed faster than those without microabscesses. Our findings are indicative of a neutrophil-keratinocyte axis in psoriasis that may involve neutrophil-derived IL-17 and is an early target of IL-17A-directed therapies such as secukinumab.


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