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Psoriasis

Authors :
Jacqueline E. Greb
Ari M. Goldminz
James T. Elder
Mark G. Lebwohl
Dafna D. Gladman
Jashin J. Wu
Nehal N. Mehta
Andrew Y. Finlay
Alice B. Gottlieb
Source :
Nature reviews. Disease primers. 2
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Psoriasis is a chronic, immune-mediated disorder with cutaneous and systemic manifestations and substantial negative effects on patient quality of life. Psoriasis has a strong, albeit polygenic, genetic basis. Whereas approximately half of the accountable genetic effect of psoriasis maps to the major histocompatibility complex,70 other loci have been identified, many of which implicate nuclear factor-κB, interferon signalling and the IL-23-IL-23 receptor axis. Psoriasis pathophysiology is characterized by abnormal keratinocyte proliferation and immune cell infiltration in the dermis and epidermis involving the innate and adaptive immune systems, with important roles for dendritic cells and T cells, among other cells. Frequent comorbidities are rheumatological and cardiovascular in nature, in particular, psoriatic arthritis. Current treatments for psoriasis include topical agents, photo-based therapies, traditional systemic drugs and biologic agents. Treatments can be used in combination or as monotherapy. Biologic therapies that target specific disease mediators have become a mainstay in the treatment of moderate-to-severe disease, whereas advances in the treatment of mild-to-moderate disease have been limited.

Details

ISSN :
2056676X
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature reviews. Disease primers
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cab8cad996527e45d8d9161f4fa26725