Background
In subjects with psoriasis, inflammation and epidermal hyperplasia are thought to be controlled by T cell-derived cytokines. Evidence suggests that the T(H)17 cell cytokine IL-17A (IL-17) might play a role in disease pathogenesis.
Conclusion
Our data suggest that IL-17 is a key "driver" cytokine that activates pathogenic inflammation in subjects with psoriasis. Neutralizing IL-17 with ixekizumab might be a successful therapeutic strategy in psoriasis.
Methods
We examined skin lesions obtained from 40 subjects participating in a phase I, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of the anti-IL-17 mAb ixekizumab (previously LY2439821) in which subjects received 5, 15, 50, or 150 mg of subcutaneous ixekizumab or placebo at weeks 0, 2, and 4.
Objective
We sought to understand the effect that neutralization of IL-17 has on the clinical features of psoriasis and to understand the role that IL-17 has in inflammatory pathways underlying psoriasis in human subjects.
Results
There were significant dose-dependent reductions from baseline in keratinocyte proliferation, hyperplasia, epidermal thickness, infiltration into the dermis and epidermis by T cells and dendritic cells, and keratinocyte expression of innate defense peptides at 2 weeks. By week 6, the skin appeared normal. Quantitative RT-PCR and microarrays revealed an ablation of the disease-defining mRNA expression profile by 2 weeks after the first dose of study drug. The effect of IL-17 blockade on expression of genes synergistically regulated by IL-17 and TNF-α was of higher magnitude at 2 weeks than in prior studies with TNF-α antagonism.
