Clinical improvement in psoriasis with specific targeting of interleukin-23
Author(s) -
Tamara Kopp,
Elisabeth Riedl,
Christine Bangert,
Edward P. Bowman,
Elli K. Greisenegger,
Ann D. Horowitz,
Harald Kittler,
Wendy M. Blumenschein,
Terrill K. McClanahan,
Thomas Marbury,
Claus Zachariae,
Danlin Xu,
Xiaoli Hou,
Anish Mehta,
Anthe S. Zandvliet,
Diana Montgomery,
Frank van Aarle,
Sauzanne Khalilieh
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature14175
Subject(s) - interleukin 23 , psoriasis , medicine , psoriasis area and severity index , clinical trial , immunology , antibody , placebo , interleukin 17 , immune system , pathology , alternative medicine
Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disorder that affects approximately 2-3% of the population worldwide and has severe effects on patients' physical and psychological well-being. The discovery that psoriasis is an immune-mediated disease has led to more targeted, effective therapies; recent advances have focused on the interleukin (IL)-12/23p40 subunit shared by IL-12 and IL-23. Evidence suggests that specific inhibition of IL-23 would result in improvement in psoriasis. Here we evaluate tildrakizumab, a monoclonal antibody that targets the IL-23p19 subunit, in a three-part, randomized, placebo-controlled, sequential, rising multiple-dose phase I study in patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis to provide clinical proof that specific targeting of IL-23p19 results in symptomatic improvement of disease severity in human subjects. A 75% reduction in the psoriasis area and severity index (PASI) score (PASI75) was achieved by all subjects in parts 1 and 3 (pooled) in the 3 and 10 mg kg(-1) groups by day 196. In part 2, 10 out of 15 subjects in the 3 mg kg(-1) group and 13 out of 14 subjects in the 10 mg kg(-1) group achieved a PASI75 by day 112. Tildrakizumab demonstrated important clinical improvement in moderate-to-severe psoriasis patients as demonstrated by improvements in PASI scores and histological samples.
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