Atopic Dermatitis: a Short Summary
- Alopecia Areata (AA) is an inflammatory cause of non-scarring alopecia which carries a lifetime risk 1.7%
- Treatment options now available include, topical and intralesional steroids, Diphencyprone (DCP), oral steroids (in pulse dose)
- Genetics is poorly understood:
- innate and adaptive immunity
- The cause of the infiltrate of T cells at the base of hair follicles is unknown (swarm of bees)
- The disease appears to be triggered by a collapse of immune privilege (alpha MSH, TGF beta 1, IGF1, NK cell suspension) and the subsequent activation of danger signals
- Genes associated with AA:
- ULBP3/ ULBP6 (H60 in the mice)= ligands for receptor NKG2D
- is a ligand on NK cells (and CD8+ T cells) and is required to induce T-cell mediated action in AA when stimulated by antigen presenting cells (APC)
- Marked ULBP3 overexpression is observed when compared to the hair follicle in controls(also HLA A and HLA DQ beta 2 although less interesting in this study)
- NKG2D positive cells when injected enable mice to lose their hair
- (NKG2D negative cells when injected DO NOT induce mice to lose their hair)
- ULBP3/ ULBP6 (H60 in the mice)= ligands for receptor NKG2D
- Diseases genomically related to AA:
- Type 1 diabetes
- Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)
- Celiac disease
- Facts revealed by this study:
- IFN-gamma is upregulated in Alopecia Areata (AA): Anti-IFN gamma and anti-IL15 blockade enable mice NOT to lose their hair
- JAK-STAT signalling: Janus kinases (JAK) inhibitors appear to play an important role
- In mice (C3H/ HeJ ):
- JAK1 and 2 are inhibited by Ruxolitinib (Jakafi)
- JAK 3 is inhibited by Tofacitinib (Xelajanz)
- Indeed, topical application of tofacitinib and ruxolitinib topicaly hindered hair loss when compared with untreated mice
- When the disease was already present, systemic administration of these drugs reversed the disease
- In mice (C3H/ HeJ ):
Human open-label studies with Jakafi are being conducted and the results are not published here.
Contributors
Dr Christophe Hsu – dermatologist. Geneva, Switzerland
Source of information: Christiano A et al. Genetics and Immunology of Alopecia Areata.Tanioku Kihei Memorial lecture. JSID Annual Meeting (Japanese Society of Investigative Dermatology, 日本研究皮膚科学会) 2014 – Osaka, Japan
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