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IL-23 skin and joint profiling in psoriatic arthritis: novel perspectives in understanding clinical responses to IL-23 inhibitors

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Objectives To determine the relationship between synovial versus skin transcriptional/histological profiles in patients with active psoriatic arthritis (PsA) and explore mechanistic links between diseased tissue pathology and clinical outcomes. Methods… Click to show full abstract

Objectives To determine the relationship between synovial versus skin transcriptional/histological profiles in patients with active psoriatic arthritis (PsA) and explore mechanistic links between diseased tissue pathology and clinical outcomes. Methods Twenty-seven active PsA patients were enrolled in an observational/open-label study and underwent biopsies of synovium and paired lesional/non-lesional skin before starting anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF) (if biologic-naïve) or ustekinumab (if anti-TNF inadequate responders). Molecular analysis of 80-inflammation-related genes and protein levels for interleukin (IL)-23p40/IL-23p19/IL-23R were assessed by real-time-PCR and immunohistochemistry, respectively. Results At baseline, all patients had persistent active disease as per inclusion criteria. At primary end-point (16-weeks post-treatment), skin responses favoured ustekinumab, while joint responses favoured anti-TNF therapies. Principal component analysis revealed distinct clustering of synovial tissue gene expression away from the matched skin. While IL12B, IL23A and IL23R were homogeneously expressed in lesional skin, their expression was extremely heterogeneous in paired synovial tissues. Here, IL-23 transcriptomic/protein expression was strongly linked to patients with high-grade synovitis who, however, were not distinguishable by conventional clinimetric measures. Conclusions PsA synovial tissue shows a heterogeneous IL-23 axis profile when compared with matched skin. Synovial molecular pathology may help to identify among clinically indistinguishable patients those with a greater probability of responding to IL-23 inhibitors.

Keywords: psoriatic arthritis; skin joint; profiling psoriatic; joint profiling; pathology

Journal Title: Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
Year Published: 2020

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