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Association of the Psoriatic Microenvironment With Treatment Response
- Source :
- JAMA Dermatol
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Importance The ability to predict the efficacy of systemic psoriasis therapy based on immune profiles in skin biopsies could reduce the use of inappropriate treatment and its associated costs and adverse events. It could considerably decrease drug development trial costs as well. Objective To develop a bioinformatic gene signature score derived from skin mRNA to predict psoriasis treatment outcomes for a variety of therapies. Design, Setting, and Participants In this decision analytical model using 1145 skin samples from different cohorts of 12 retrospective psoriasis studies, samples were analyzed using the CIBERSORT algorithm to define the immune landscape of psoriasis lesions and controls. Random forest classification and principal component analysis algorithms were used to estimate psoriatic microenvironment (PME) signature genes and construct a PME score. Overall, 85 and 421 psoriasis lesions from 1 and 4 independent cohorts were used as discovery and validation studies, respectively. Among them, 157, 71, 89, and 90 psoriasis lesions were treated with etanercept, tofacitinib, adalimumab, and methotrexate, respectively. Main Outcomes and Measures Number of weeks after treatment initiation when responders and nonresponders could be predicted. Results Overall, 22 immune cell subtypes formed infiltration patterns that differentiated psoriasis lesions from healthy skin. In psoriasis lesions, the expression of 33 PME signature genes defined 2 immune phenotypes and in aggregate could be simplified to a numerical PME score. A high PME score, characterized by keratinocyte differentiation, correlated with a better treatment response (Psoriasis Area and Severity Index [PASI] reduction, 75.8%; 95% CI, 69.4% to 82.2%;P = .03), whereas a low PME score exhibited an immune activation signature and was associated with a worse response (PASI reduction, 53.5%; 95% CI, 45.3% to 61.7%;P = .03). The PME score at week 4 after treatment initiation correlated with future responder vs nonresponder to treatment status 8 to 12 weeks earlier than PASI reduction for etanercept, methotrexate plus adalimumab, and tofacitinib. Conclusions and Relevance The PME score is a biometric score that may predict clinical efficacy of systemic psoriasis therapy in advance of clinical responses. As an application of personalized medicine, it may reduce the exposure of patients with psoriasis to ineffective and expensive therapies.
- Subjects :
- Oncology
medicine.medical_specialty
Biopsy
Clinical Decision-Making
Datasets as Topic
Dermatology
Severity of Illness Index
Etanercept
030207 dermatology & venereal diseases
03 medical and health sciences
Biological Factors
0302 clinical medicine
Piperidines
Psoriasis Area and Severity Index
Internal medicine
Psoriasis
medicine
Adalimumab
Humans
RNA, Messenger
Precision Medicine
Adverse effect
Retrospective Studies
Skin
Original Investigation
Tofacitinib
Whole Genome Sequencing
business.industry
Gene Expression Profiling
Gene signature
medicine.disease
Prognosis
Methotrexate
Pyrimidines
Treatment Outcome
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
business
Transcriptome
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 21686084
- Volume :
- 156
- Issue :
- 10
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- JAMA dermatology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....69524ce5871dcbb811399bd01c468f71