Recent psoriasis pathophysiology insights carry treatment implications

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Several surprising recent insights into the pathophysiology of psoriasis may eventually lead to superior treatment strategies for this common T-cell-mediated disease, Kenneth Brian Gordon, MD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually.

Psoriasis NPF07
Courtesy National Psoriasis Foundation

Among these unexpected developments was the startling finding that skin inflammation in mild psoriasis is at least as great as in severe disease; evidence that psoriasis may actually be an autoimmune disease rather than a nonspecific immune-mediated disease; and the newly appreciated importance of interleukin-19 (IL-19) in keratinocyte proliferation, according to Dr. Gordon, professor and chair of the department of dermatology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

Kenneth Brian Gordon, MD, chair and professor of dermatology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Dr. Kenneth Brian Gordon


“Our understanding of the pathophysiology of psoriasis is still a work in progress,” the dermatologist observed.
 

Immunoregulatory deficits in mild vs. severe psoriasis

Conventional wisdom has held that mild psoriasis as defined by limited affected body surface area involves less skin inflammation than more extensive severe psoriasis, so less-potent topical therapies are appropriate. Not so, according to Dr. Gordon, who highlighted work by James G. Krueger, MD, PhD, head of the laboratory of investigative dermatology at Rockefeller University, New York, and coinvestigators. They demonstrated that overall skin inflammation expressed as the sum of T-cell activation and IL-19-mediated epidermal responses didn’t differ in lesions of mild as compared with severe psoriasis. Indeed, mild skin lesions featured a greater number of T-cells, stronger expression of proinflammatory cytokine IL-17A, and greater expression of the central psoriasis transcriptome. The big difference between skin lesions of mild versus severe psoriasis was that severe psoriasis was characterized by strikingly weaker expression of immunoregulatory genes, including programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA4), than that of mild lesions.

The implication is that IL-17-targeted therapies may be of benefit in a much larger segment of the psoriatic population: namely, those with mild disease, who comprise the majority of psoriasis patients by a wide margin, according to the investigators.

Dr. Gordon concurs.

“The primary problem in psoriasis is not so much the inflammatory activity, but the ability to turn off the activity,” he explained. “That implies that if a patient wants to get clear or have significant improvement in disease, you can’t use a less effective medication just because they have less amount of disease. You’re going to need to treat it just as aggressively because the great majority of our medications block the proinflammatory pathways.”

The deficit in immunoregulatory action identified by Dr. Krueger and colleagues in patients with severe disease could provide a novel therapeutic target. If the deficient immunoregulation could be boosted, it might achieve disease control without need for continuous anti-inflammatory therapy.

 

Autoimmunity in psoriasis

“When I started work in psoriasis, we always thought there would be a common antigen for the immune process in the disease. We never found it. So for that reason, we sort of put it aside and called psoriasis a nonspecific immune-mediated disease,” Dr. Gordon recalled.

That view is being reexamined. “While we’re not completely certain, there is now some evidence that there might be autoimmunity in psoriasis,” he said.



He cited work by an international team of investigators who identified the cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide LL37 as being overexpressed in psoriatic skin, where it appears to serve as a T-cell autoantigen. LL37-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells are skin homing: They can infiltrate lesional skin, where they produce interferon-gamma and proinflammatory Th17 cytokines. The investigators reported that levels of circulating LL37-specific T cells correlated with disease activity such that they were found in three-quarters of patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.

“As LL37 is able to activate innate immune cells and break innate tolerance to self-nucleic acids, it represents an even more appealing target to treat psoriasis. Therapeutic targeting of LL37-specific T cells may provide new avenues to prevent or treat psoriasis without inducing indiscriminate immunosuppression,” the investigators concluded.

Similarly, German investigators have identified ADAMTS-like protein 5 (ADAMTSL5) as an autoantigen specific for melanocytes in psoriasis patients who possess the central psoriasis risk gene, known as HLA-C*06:02, which is present in two-thirds of patients with psoriasis. They proposed that their newly recognized autoimmune pathway may explain how HLA-C*06.02 predisposes to psoriasis.

Growing clinical relevance of IL-19

It’s now well-established that IL-17 is the pivotal force driving the changes in keratinocytes that define the visible expressions of psoriasis, including plaque scale and thickness, which are due to abnormal keratinocyte maturation and proliferation, respectively. Less well appreciated is the fact that IL-17-activated keratinocytes produce IL-19, which feeds back and further stimulates keratinocyte proliferation.

In light of mounting evidence that IL-19 plays an important role in the pathogenesis of psoriasis and that naked eye assessment of visible psoriasis may not reflect the true extent of inflammation, Brian J. Nickoloff, MD, PhD, and coworkers at Lilly Research Laboratories have developed a novel serum IL-19 immunoassay that appears to provide a much-needed objective biomarker of disease activity in psoriasis patients. They demonstrated that serum IL-19 levels correlated with Psoriasis Area and Severity Index scores, and that treatment with the anti-IL-17A biologic ixekizumab (Taltz) led to rapid reduction of IL-19 down to a normal level.

Moreover, following withdrawal of ixekizumab, IL-19 levels rose prior to clinical relapse, then dropped again in response to retreatment. The hope is that this assay will serve as an accurate tool for assessment of response to therapy.

Dr. Gordon reported receiving research funding and/or honoraria from more than a dozen pharmaceutical companies involved in psoriasis therapy.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Several surprising recent insights into the pathophysiology of psoriasis may eventually lead to superior treatment strategies for this common T-cell-mediated disease, Kenneth Brian Gordon, MD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually.

Psoriasis NPF07
Courtesy National Psoriasis Foundation

Among these unexpected developments was the startling finding that skin inflammation in mild psoriasis is at least as great as in severe disease; evidence that psoriasis may actually be an autoimmune disease rather than a nonspecific immune-mediated disease; and the newly appreciated importance of interleukin-19 (IL-19) in keratinocyte proliferation, according to Dr. Gordon, professor and chair of the department of dermatology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

Kenneth Brian Gordon, MD, chair and professor of dermatology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Dr. Kenneth Brian Gordon


“Our understanding of the pathophysiology of psoriasis is still a work in progress,” the dermatologist observed.
 

Immunoregulatory deficits in mild vs. severe psoriasis

Conventional wisdom has held that mild psoriasis as defined by limited affected body surface area involves less skin inflammation than more extensive severe psoriasis, so less-potent topical therapies are appropriate. Not so, according to Dr. Gordon, who highlighted work by James G. Krueger, MD, PhD, head of the laboratory of investigative dermatology at Rockefeller University, New York, and coinvestigators. They demonstrated that overall skin inflammation expressed as the sum of T-cell activation and IL-19-mediated epidermal responses didn’t differ in lesions of mild as compared with severe psoriasis. Indeed, mild skin lesions featured a greater number of T-cells, stronger expression of proinflammatory cytokine IL-17A, and greater expression of the central psoriasis transcriptome. The big difference between skin lesions of mild versus severe psoriasis was that severe psoriasis was characterized by strikingly weaker expression of immunoregulatory genes, including programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA4), than that of mild lesions.

The implication is that IL-17-targeted therapies may be of benefit in a much larger segment of the psoriatic population: namely, those with mild disease, who comprise the majority of psoriasis patients by a wide margin, according to the investigators.

Dr. Gordon concurs.

“The primary problem in psoriasis is not so much the inflammatory activity, but the ability to turn off the activity,” he explained. “That implies that if a patient wants to get clear or have significant improvement in disease, you can’t use a less effective medication just because they have less amount of disease. You’re going to need to treat it just as aggressively because the great majority of our medications block the proinflammatory pathways.”

The deficit in immunoregulatory action identified by Dr. Krueger and colleagues in patients with severe disease could provide a novel therapeutic target. If the deficient immunoregulation could be boosted, it might achieve disease control without need for continuous anti-inflammatory therapy.

 

Autoimmunity in psoriasis

“When I started work in psoriasis, we always thought there would be a common antigen for the immune process in the disease. We never found it. So for that reason, we sort of put it aside and called psoriasis a nonspecific immune-mediated disease,” Dr. Gordon recalled.

That view is being reexamined. “While we’re not completely certain, there is now some evidence that there might be autoimmunity in psoriasis,” he said.



He cited work by an international team of investigators who identified the cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide LL37 as being overexpressed in psoriatic skin, where it appears to serve as a T-cell autoantigen. LL37-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells are skin homing: They can infiltrate lesional skin, where they produce interferon-gamma and proinflammatory Th17 cytokines. The investigators reported that levels of circulating LL37-specific T cells correlated with disease activity such that they were found in three-quarters of patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.

“As LL37 is able to activate innate immune cells and break innate tolerance to self-nucleic acids, it represents an even more appealing target to treat psoriasis. Therapeutic targeting of LL37-specific T cells may provide new avenues to prevent or treat psoriasis without inducing indiscriminate immunosuppression,” the investigators concluded.

Similarly, German investigators have identified ADAMTS-like protein 5 (ADAMTSL5) as an autoantigen specific for melanocytes in psoriasis patients who possess the central psoriasis risk gene, known as HLA-C*06:02, which is present in two-thirds of patients with psoriasis. They proposed that their newly recognized autoimmune pathway may explain how HLA-C*06.02 predisposes to psoriasis.

Growing clinical relevance of IL-19

It’s now well-established that IL-17 is the pivotal force driving the changes in keratinocytes that define the visible expressions of psoriasis, including plaque scale and thickness, which are due to abnormal keratinocyte maturation and proliferation, respectively. Less well appreciated is the fact that IL-17-activated keratinocytes produce IL-19, which feeds back and further stimulates keratinocyte proliferation.

In light of mounting evidence that IL-19 plays an important role in the pathogenesis of psoriasis and that naked eye assessment of visible psoriasis may not reflect the true extent of inflammation, Brian J. Nickoloff, MD, PhD, and coworkers at Lilly Research Laboratories have developed a novel serum IL-19 immunoassay that appears to provide a much-needed objective biomarker of disease activity in psoriasis patients. They demonstrated that serum IL-19 levels correlated with Psoriasis Area and Severity Index scores, and that treatment with the anti-IL-17A biologic ixekizumab (Taltz) led to rapid reduction of IL-19 down to a normal level.

Moreover, following withdrawal of ixekizumab, IL-19 levels rose prior to clinical relapse, then dropped again in response to retreatment. The hope is that this assay will serve as an accurate tool for assessment of response to therapy.

Dr. Gordon reported receiving research funding and/or honoraria from more than a dozen pharmaceutical companies involved in psoriasis therapy.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Several surprising recent insights into the pathophysiology of psoriasis may eventually lead to superior treatment strategies for this common T-cell-mediated disease, Kenneth Brian Gordon, MD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually.

Psoriasis NPF07
Courtesy National Psoriasis Foundation

Among these unexpected developments was the startling finding that skin inflammation in mild psoriasis is at least as great as in severe disease; evidence that psoriasis may actually be an autoimmune disease rather than a nonspecific immune-mediated disease; and the newly appreciated importance of interleukin-19 (IL-19) in keratinocyte proliferation, according to Dr. Gordon, professor and chair of the department of dermatology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

Kenneth Brian Gordon, MD, chair and professor of dermatology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Dr. Kenneth Brian Gordon


“Our understanding of the pathophysiology of psoriasis is still a work in progress,” the dermatologist observed.
 

Immunoregulatory deficits in mild vs. severe psoriasis

Conventional wisdom has held that mild psoriasis as defined by limited affected body surface area involves less skin inflammation than more extensive severe psoriasis, so less-potent topical therapies are appropriate. Not so, according to Dr. Gordon, who highlighted work by James G. Krueger, MD, PhD, head of the laboratory of investigative dermatology at Rockefeller University, New York, and coinvestigators. They demonstrated that overall skin inflammation expressed as the sum of T-cell activation and IL-19-mediated epidermal responses didn’t differ in lesions of mild as compared with severe psoriasis. Indeed, mild skin lesions featured a greater number of T-cells, stronger expression of proinflammatory cytokine IL-17A, and greater expression of the central psoriasis transcriptome. The big difference between skin lesions of mild versus severe psoriasis was that severe psoriasis was characterized by strikingly weaker expression of immunoregulatory genes, including programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA4), than that of mild lesions.

The implication is that IL-17-targeted therapies may be of benefit in a much larger segment of the psoriatic population: namely, those with mild disease, who comprise the majority of psoriasis patients by a wide margin, according to the investigators.

Dr. Gordon concurs.

“The primary problem in psoriasis is not so much the inflammatory activity, but the ability to turn off the activity,” he explained. “That implies that if a patient wants to get clear or have significant improvement in disease, you can’t use a less effective medication just because they have less amount of disease. You’re going to need to treat it just as aggressively because the great majority of our medications block the proinflammatory pathways.”

The deficit in immunoregulatory action identified by Dr. Krueger and colleagues in patients with severe disease could provide a novel therapeutic target. If the deficient immunoregulation could be boosted, it might achieve disease control without need for continuous anti-inflammatory therapy.

 

Autoimmunity in psoriasis

“When I started work in psoriasis, we always thought there would be a common antigen for the immune process in the disease. We never found it. So for that reason, we sort of put it aside and called psoriasis a nonspecific immune-mediated disease,” Dr. Gordon recalled.

That view is being reexamined. “While we’re not completely certain, there is now some evidence that there might be autoimmunity in psoriasis,” he said.



He cited work by an international team of investigators who identified the cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide LL37 as being overexpressed in psoriatic skin, where it appears to serve as a T-cell autoantigen. LL37-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells are skin homing: They can infiltrate lesional skin, where they produce interferon-gamma and proinflammatory Th17 cytokines. The investigators reported that levels of circulating LL37-specific T cells correlated with disease activity such that they were found in three-quarters of patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.

“As LL37 is able to activate innate immune cells and break innate tolerance to self-nucleic acids, it represents an even more appealing target to treat psoriasis. Therapeutic targeting of LL37-specific T cells may provide new avenues to prevent or treat psoriasis without inducing indiscriminate immunosuppression,” the investigators concluded.

Similarly, German investigators have identified ADAMTS-like protein 5 (ADAMTSL5) as an autoantigen specific for melanocytes in psoriasis patients who possess the central psoriasis risk gene, known as HLA-C*06:02, which is present in two-thirds of patients with psoriasis. They proposed that their newly recognized autoimmune pathway may explain how HLA-C*06.02 predisposes to psoriasis.

Growing clinical relevance of IL-19

It’s now well-established that IL-17 is the pivotal force driving the changes in keratinocytes that define the visible expressions of psoriasis, including plaque scale and thickness, which are due to abnormal keratinocyte maturation and proliferation, respectively. Less well appreciated is the fact that IL-17-activated keratinocytes produce IL-19, which feeds back and further stimulates keratinocyte proliferation.

In light of mounting evidence that IL-19 plays an important role in the pathogenesis of psoriasis and that naked eye assessment of visible psoriasis may not reflect the true extent of inflammation, Brian J. Nickoloff, MD, PhD, and coworkers at Lilly Research Laboratories have developed a novel serum IL-19 immunoassay that appears to provide a much-needed objective biomarker of disease activity in psoriasis patients. They demonstrated that serum IL-19 levels correlated with Psoriasis Area and Severity Index scores, and that treatment with the anti-IL-17A biologic ixekizumab (Taltz) led to rapid reduction of IL-19 down to a normal level.

Moreover, following withdrawal of ixekizumab, IL-19 levels rose prior to clinical relapse, then dropped again in response to retreatment. The hope is that this assay will serve as an accurate tool for assessment of response to therapy.

Dr. Gordon reported receiving research funding and/or honoraria from more than a dozen pharmaceutical companies involved in psoriasis therapy.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Neoadjuvant immunotherapy shows promise in stage III melanoma

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Changed
Wed, 02/10/2021 - 16:56

The next dramatic advance in the treatment of melanoma may arise from highly promising clinical trials in which immune checkpoint inhibitors and anti-BRAF/MEK agents are being pushed forward in the treatment paradigm and utilized as neoadjuvant therapy in patients with stage III resectable disease, John M. Kirkwood, MD, predicted at a virtual forum on cutaneous malignancies jointly presented by the Postgraduate Institute for Medicine and Global Academy for Medical Education.

John Kirkwood, MD, professor of medicine, dermatology, and translational science at the University of Pittsburgh
Dr. John M. Kirkwood

These agents have already demonstrated profound efficacy, first in stage IV metastatic disease and more recently as adjuvant therapy for resected stage III melanoma. Now, there is a great interest in learning whether by prescribing them preoperatively, patients might reduce their risk of advancing to metastatic disease. And neoadjuvant therapy offers an extremely attractive feature: It yields results in an accelerated fashion.

“The major problem with postoperative adjuvant trials in melanoma since 1984 is the long time to maturity. Many of us don’t want to wait the full 9 or 10 years for a full-bore, phase 3 adjuvant trial in stage III melanoma to mature,” explained Dr. Kirkwood, professor of medicine, dermatology, and translational science and coleader of the melanoma and skin cancer program at the University of Pittsburgh. “The opportunity to treat a patient who presents with a bulky lymph node, has a biopsy, and then can be treated for 3 or 6 weeks or sometimes even longer periods with a therapy that’s promising allows us to ask what’s going on in the tumor tissue, what’s going on in the clinical response at 3 or 6 weeks, and if there’s pathological complete or near-complete response under the microscope.”

Because pathological complete response is a strong predictor of relapse-free survival, this neoadjuvant-forward therapeutic strategy has the potential to provide patients and their physicians with an early forecast of likely clinical outcome only 4-6 weeks into treatment. Also, there is both preclinical and clinical evidence that neoadjuvant therapy may offer a survival advantage over adjuvant therapy, perhaps as a result of early treatment of micrometastatic disease. Another benefit of neoadjuvant therapy for melanoma is the resultant tumor shrinkage, which can permit less extensive surgery.

Dr. Kirkwood highlighted a phase 2 clinical trial conducted at the University of Pittsburgh to illustrate the potential of neoadjuvant therapy in melanoma. The ongoing single-arm study includes 32 patients with stage IIIB or IIIC resectable melanoma along with accessible tumor for biopsy and intratumoral injections of CMP-001, a toll-like receptor 9 agonist. According to the Eighth Edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer staging manual, stage IIIB melanoma has a 10-year mortality of 23%, and stage IIIC disease has 40%.

CMP-001 triggers type 1 interferon production through activation of plasmacytoid dendritic cells. The resultant inflammatory response draws T cells into the tumor to enhance the response to immunotherapy, which in this study was nivolumab (Opdivo), a human programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1)–blocking antibody. The neoadjuvant regimen consisted of seven once-weekly intratumoral injections of CMP-001, plus three 240-mg doses of nivolumab given at 2-week intervals. This was followed by resection, then 1 year of adjuvant therapy with nivolumab at 480 mg every 4 weeks and intratumoral CMP-001 every 4 weeks.



In an interim analysis, a major pathologic response occurred in an impressive 15 of 21 patients (71%) after 6 weeks of neoadjuvant therapy. Thirteen of the 15 had a pathologic complete response. Encouragingly, no one with a pathologic complete or near-complete response has relapsed to date.

“A pathologic complete response or near-complete response with neoadjuvant therapy appears to be a biomarker of durable disease control and is associated with excellent outcomes,” Dr. Kirkwood observed, adding that the Pittsburgh experience has been mirrored in reports from the Netherlands, Australia, and University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, involving other neoadjuvant agents.

Other potential early biomarkers of favorable outcome with neoadjuvant therapy include CD8+ T cells in the tumor at baseline, tumor mutational burden, T-cell clonality, and a T-cell–inflamed gene-expression profile.

There were no dose-limiting toxicities or delays in surgery related to the neoadjuvant treatment.

Of note, imaging often inaccurately showed only a partial response in patients who actually had a pathologic complete response, meaning totally devoid of tumor, Dr. Kirkwood said.

Corroboration of these findings is planned in the national multicenter ECOG-ACRIN neoadjuvant trial EA6194.

“Consider referring to this trial any patients who present with bulky nodal disease for whom a treatment assessment at 4-6 weeks is desired in order to predict what the outcome may be,” he suggested.

Dr. Kirkwood reported receiving research grants from Amgen, BMS, Castle Biosciences, Checkmate, Immunocore, Iovance, and Novartis and serving as a consultant to a handful of companies.

Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same company.

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The next dramatic advance in the treatment of melanoma may arise from highly promising clinical trials in which immune checkpoint inhibitors and anti-BRAF/MEK agents are being pushed forward in the treatment paradigm and utilized as neoadjuvant therapy in patients with stage III resectable disease, John M. Kirkwood, MD, predicted at a virtual forum on cutaneous malignancies jointly presented by the Postgraduate Institute for Medicine and Global Academy for Medical Education.

John Kirkwood, MD, professor of medicine, dermatology, and translational science at the University of Pittsburgh
Dr. John M. Kirkwood

These agents have already demonstrated profound efficacy, first in stage IV metastatic disease and more recently as adjuvant therapy for resected stage III melanoma. Now, there is a great interest in learning whether by prescribing them preoperatively, patients might reduce their risk of advancing to metastatic disease. And neoadjuvant therapy offers an extremely attractive feature: It yields results in an accelerated fashion.

“The major problem with postoperative adjuvant trials in melanoma since 1984 is the long time to maturity. Many of us don’t want to wait the full 9 or 10 years for a full-bore, phase 3 adjuvant trial in stage III melanoma to mature,” explained Dr. Kirkwood, professor of medicine, dermatology, and translational science and coleader of the melanoma and skin cancer program at the University of Pittsburgh. “The opportunity to treat a patient who presents with a bulky lymph node, has a biopsy, and then can be treated for 3 or 6 weeks or sometimes even longer periods with a therapy that’s promising allows us to ask what’s going on in the tumor tissue, what’s going on in the clinical response at 3 or 6 weeks, and if there’s pathological complete or near-complete response under the microscope.”

Because pathological complete response is a strong predictor of relapse-free survival, this neoadjuvant-forward therapeutic strategy has the potential to provide patients and their physicians with an early forecast of likely clinical outcome only 4-6 weeks into treatment. Also, there is both preclinical and clinical evidence that neoadjuvant therapy may offer a survival advantage over adjuvant therapy, perhaps as a result of early treatment of micrometastatic disease. Another benefit of neoadjuvant therapy for melanoma is the resultant tumor shrinkage, which can permit less extensive surgery.

Dr. Kirkwood highlighted a phase 2 clinical trial conducted at the University of Pittsburgh to illustrate the potential of neoadjuvant therapy in melanoma. The ongoing single-arm study includes 32 patients with stage IIIB or IIIC resectable melanoma along with accessible tumor for biopsy and intratumoral injections of CMP-001, a toll-like receptor 9 agonist. According to the Eighth Edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer staging manual, stage IIIB melanoma has a 10-year mortality of 23%, and stage IIIC disease has 40%.

CMP-001 triggers type 1 interferon production through activation of plasmacytoid dendritic cells. The resultant inflammatory response draws T cells into the tumor to enhance the response to immunotherapy, which in this study was nivolumab (Opdivo), a human programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1)–blocking antibody. The neoadjuvant regimen consisted of seven once-weekly intratumoral injections of CMP-001, plus three 240-mg doses of nivolumab given at 2-week intervals. This was followed by resection, then 1 year of adjuvant therapy with nivolumab at 480 mg every 4 weeks and intratumoral CMP-001 every 4 weeks.



In an interim analysis, a major pathologic response occurred in an impressive 15 of 21 patients (71%) after 6 weeks of neoadjuvant therapy. Thirteen of the 15 had a pathologic complete response. Encouragingly, no one with a pathologic complete or near-complete response has relapsed to date.

“A pathologic complete response or near-complete response with neoadjuvant therapy appears to be a biomarker of durable disease control and is associated with excellent outcomes,” Dr. Kirkwood observed, adding that the Pittsburgh experience has been mirrored in reports from the Netherlands, Australia, and University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, involving other neoadjuvant agents.

Other potential early biomarkers of favorable outcome with neoadjuvant therapy include CD8+ T cells in the tumor at baseline, tumor mutational burden, T-cell clonality, and a T-cell–inflamed gene-expression profile.

There were no dose-limiting toxicities or delays in surgery related to the neoadjuvant treatment.

Of note, imaging often inaccurately showed only a partial response in patients who actually had a pathologic complete response, meaning totally devoid of tumor, Dr. Kirkwood said.

Corroboration of these findings is planned in the national multicenter ECOG-ACRIN neoadjuvant trial EA6194.

“Consider referring to this trial any patients who present with bulky nodal disease for whom a treatment assessment at 4-6 weeks is desired in order to predict what the outcome may be,” he suggested.

Dr. Kirkwood reported receiving research grants from Amgen, BMS, Castle Biosciences, Checkmate, Immunocore, Iovance, and Novartis and serving as a consultant to a handful of companies.

Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same company.

The next dramatic advance in the treatment of melanoma may arise from highly promising clinical trials in which immune checkpoint inhibitors and anti-BRAF/MEK agents are being pushed forward in the treatment paradigm and utilized as neoadjuvant therapy in patients with stage III resectable disease, John M. Kirkwood, MD, predicted at a virtual forum on cutaneous malignancies jointly presented by the Postgraduate Institute for Medicine and Global Academy for Medical Education.

John Kirkwood, MD, professor of medicine, dermatology, and translational science at the University of Pittsburgh
Dr. John M. Kirkwood

These agents have already demonstrated profound efficacy, first in stage IV metastatic disease and more recently as adjuvant therapy for resected stage III melanoma. Now, there is a great interest in learning whether by prescribing them preoperatively, patients might reduce their risk of advancing to metastatic disease. And neoadjuvant therapy offers an extremely attractive feature: It yields results in an accelerated fashion.

“The major problem with postoperative adjuvant trials in melanoma since 1984 is the long time to maturity. Many of us don’t want to wait the full 9 or 10 years for a full-bore, phase 3 adjuvant trial in stage III melanoma to mature,” explained Dr. Kirkwood, professor of medicine, dermatology, and translational science and coleader of the melanoma and skin cancer program at the University of Pittsburgh. “The opportunity to treat a patient who presents with a bulky lymph node, has a biopsy, and then can be treated for 3 or 6 weeks or sometimes even longer periods with a therapy that’s promising allows us to ask what’s going on in the tumor tissue, what’s going on in the clinical response at 3 or 6 weeks, and if there’s pathological complete or near-complete response under the microscope.”

Because pathological complete response is a strong predictor of relapse-free survival, this neoadjuvant-forward therapeutic strategy has the potential to provide patients and their physicians with an early forecast of likely clinical outcome only 4-6 weeks into treatment. Also, there is both preclinical and clinical evidence that neoadjuvant therapy may offer a survival advantage over adjuvant therapy, perhaps as a result of early treatment of micrometastatic disease. Another benefit of neoadjuvant therapy for melanoma is the resultant tumor shrinkage, which can permit less extensive surgery.

Dr. Kirkwood highlighted a phase 2 clinical trial conducted at the University of Pittsburgh to illustrate the potential of neoadjuvant therapy in melanoma. The ongoing single-arm study includes 32 patients with stage IIIB or IIIC resectable melanoma along with accessible tumor for biopsy and intratumoral injections of CMP-001, a toll-like receptor 9 agonist. According to the Eighth Edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer staging manual, stage IIIB melanoma has a 10-year mortality of 23%, and stage IIIC disease has 40%.

CMP-001 triggers type 1 interferon production through activation of plasmacytoid dendritic cells. The resultant inflammatory response draws T cells into the tumor to enhance the response to immunotherapy, which in this study was nivolumab (Opdivo), a human programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1)–blocking antibody. The neoadjuvant regimen consisted of seven once-weekly intratumoral injections of CMP-001, plus three 240-mg doses of nivolumab given at 2-week intervals. This was followed by resection, then 1 year of adjuvant therapy with nivolumab at 480 mg every 4 weeks and intratumoral CMP-001 every 4 weeks.



In an interim analysis, a major pathologic response occurred in an impressive 15 of 21 patients (71%) after 6 weeks of neoadjuvant therapy. Thirteen of the 15 had a pathologic complete response. Encouragingly, no one with a pathologic complete or near-complete response has relapsed to date.

“A pathologic complete response or near-complete response with neoadjuvant therapy appears to be a biomarker of durable disease control and is associated with excellent outcomes,” Dr. Kirkwood observed, adding that the Pittsburgh experience has been mirrored in reports from the Netherlands, Australia, and University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, involving other neoadjuvant agents.

Other potential early biomarkers of favorable outcome with neoadjuvant therapy include CD8+ T cells in the tumor at baseline, tumor mutational burden, T-cell clonality, and a T-cell–inflamed gene-expression profile.

There were no dose-limiting toxicities or delays in surgery related to the neoadjuvant treatment.

Of note, imaging often inaccurately showed only a partial response in patients who actually had a pathologic complete response, meaning totally devoid of tumor, Dr. Kirkwood said.

Corroboration of these findings is planned in the national multicenter ECOG-ACRIN neoadjuvant trial EA6194.

“Consider referring to this trial any patients who present with bulky nodal disease for whom a treatment assessment at 4-6 weeks is desired in order to predict what the outcome may be,” he suggested.

Dr. Kirkwood reported receiving research grants from Amgen, BMS, Castle Biosciences, Checkmate, Immunocore, Iovance, and Novartis and serving as a consultant to a handful of companies.

Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same company.

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Hypochlorous acid is a valuable adjunctive treatment in AD

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Changed
Tue, 02/02/2021 - 14:28

 

Topical hypochlorous acid is an underutilized tool in the management of atopic dermatitis (AD), Joseph F. Fowler, MD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

“I definitely like hypochlorous acid products to reduce microbial load and improve itching,” said Dr. Fowler, a dermatologist at the University of Louisville (Ky.). “It’s certainly a useful adjunct – not your primary treatment – in managing atopic dermatitis, especially when infected.”

Topical stabilized hypochlorous acid for use on the skin is commercially available over the counter in gel and liquid spray forms. It’s not bleach, which is sodium hypochlorite. In fact, for use on the skin, hypochlorous acid is better than bleach, since it doesn’t stain dark clothes, it’s nonirritating, and it doesn’t smell like bleach.



“We’re not entirely sure why it has an anti-itch effect, but that might partly be due to its inhibition of mast cell degranulation. It stops the mast cell from releasing its itch-o-genic properties into the skin. It also inhibits phospholipase A2, resulting in reduction of leukotrienes and prostaglandins, which may also account for the anti-itch effect,” Dr. Fowler said.

Hypochlorous acid has a powerful antimicrobial effect. It is highly effective at rapidly killing a broad range of bacteria, viruses, and fungi, including Staphylococcus aureus, a pathogen of particular relevance in AD. After the Environmental Protection Agency added hypochlorous acid to its list of disinfectants known to be effective against coronavirus, commercial interest in the use of hypochlorous acid in higher concentrations as a disinfectant in office buildings, hospitals, and for other large-scale applications has ballooned. The product, made via a process involving electrolyzation of water, is inexpensive. It’s also nontoxic: It’s not perceived by the immune system as foreign, since hypochlorous acid is produced during the human innate immune response.

Dr. Fowler reported serving as a consultant to and on the speakers bureau for SmartPractice, and receiving research funding from Asana, Edesa Biotech, J&J, and Novartis.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Topical hypochlorous acid is an underutilized tool in the management of atopic dermatitis (AD), Joseph F. Fowler, MD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

“I definitely like hypochlorous acid products to reduce microbial load and improve itching,” said Dr. Fowler, a dermatologist at the University of Louisville (Ky.). “It’s certainly a useful adjunct – not your primary treatment – in managing atopic dermatitis, especially when infected.”

Topical stabilized hypochlorous acid for use on the skin is commercially available over the counter in gel and liquid spray forms. It’s not bleach, which is sodium hypochlorite. In fact, for use on the skin, hypochlorous acid is better than bleach, since it doesn’t stain dark clothes, it’s nonirritating, and it doesn’t smell like bleach.



“We’re not entirely sure why it has an anti-itch effect, but that might partly be due to its inhibition of mast cell degranulation. It stops the mast cell from releasing its itch-o-genic properties into the skin. It also inhibits phospholipase A2, resulting in reduction of leukotrienes and prostaglandins, which may also account for the anti-itch effect,” Dr. Fowler said.

Hypochlorous acid has a powerful antimicrobial effect. It is highly effective at rapidly killing a broad range of bacteria, viruses, and fungi, including Staphylococcus aureus, a pathogen of particular relevance in AD. After the Environmental Protection Agency added hypochlorous acid to its list of disinfectants known to be effective against coronavirus, commercial interest in the use of hypochlorous acid in higher concentrations as a disinfectant in office buildings, hospitals, and for other large-scale applications has ballooned. The product, made via a process involving electrolyzation of water, is inexpensive. It’s also nontoxic: It’s not perceived by the immune system as foreign, since hypochlorous acid is produced during the human innate immune response.

Dr. Fowler reported serving as a consultant to and on the speakers bureau for SmartPractice, and receiving research funding from Asana, Edesa Biotech, J&J, and Novartis.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

 

Topical hypochlorous acid is an underutilized tool in the management of atopic dermatitis (AD), Joseph F. Fowler, MD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

“I definitely like hypochlorous acid products to reduce microbial load and improve itching,” said Dr. Fowler, a dermatologist at the University of Louisville (Ky.). “It’s certainly a useful adjunct – not your primary treatment – in managing atopic dermatitis, especially when infected.”

Topical stabilized hypochlorous acid for use on the skin is commercially available over the counter in gel and liquid spray forms. It’s not bleach, which is sodium hypochlorite. In fact, for use on the skin, hypochlorous acid is better than bleach, since it doesn’t stain dark clothes, it’s nonirritating, and it doesn’t smell like bleach.



“We’re not entirely sure why it has an anti-itch effect, but that might partly be due to its inhibition of mast cell degranulation. It stops the mast cell from releasing its itch-o-genic properties into the skin. It also inhibits phospholipase A2, resulting in reduction of leukotrienes and prostaglandins, which may also account for the anti-itch effect,” Dr. Fowler said.

Hypochlorous acid has a powerful antimicrobial effect. It is highly effective at rapidly killing a broad range of bacteria, viruses, and fungi, including Staphylococcus aureus, a pathogen of particular relevance in AD. After the Environmental Protection Agency added hypochlorous acid to its list of disinfectants known to be effective against coronavirus, commercial interest in the use of hypochlorous acid in higher concentrations as a disinfectant in office buildings, hospitals, and for other large-scale applications has ballooned. The product, made via a process involving electrolyzation of water, is inexpensive. It’s also nontoxic: It’s not perceived by the immune system as foreign, since hypochlorous acid is produced during the human innate immune response.

Dr. Fowler reported serving as a consultant to and on the speakers bureau for SmartPractice, and receiving research funding from Asana, Edesa Biotech, J&J, and Novartis.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Deucravacitinib offers biologic-like psoriasis efficacy in oral form

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Deucravacitinib, a first-in-class oral selective tyrosine kinase 2 inhibitor, shows considerable promise as a potential novel treatment for psoriasis and a range of other chronic inflammatory diseases, Bruce E. Strober, MD, PhD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Dr. Bruce Strober professor and chair of dermatology at the University of Connecticut, Farmington
Dr. Bruce Strober

Deucravacitinib solely blocks tyrosine kinase 2 (TYK2) signaling without touching Janus kinase (JAK) 1, 2, or 3. In so doing, it inhibits several cytokines important for inflammation: interleukin-12, IL-13, and interferon-alpha and -beta. Yet it doesn’t affect the numerous pathways mediated by JAKs 1-3, many of which relate to growth and development of cell lineages, including production of erythropoietin, thrombopoietin, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, prolactin, growth hormone, and leptin. These deucravacitinib characteristics should translate into fewer off-target side effects than with oral JAK inhibitors.

“The promise of TYK2 inhibition that’s brought to you by deucravacitinib is there will be no laboratory monitoring and the effects will be narrow in blocking inflammation,” said Dr. Strober, a dermatologist at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and in private practice in Cromwell, Conn.

He highlighted the positive results of a randomized, phase 2, dose-ranging study conducted in 267 patients with moderate or severe plaque psoriasis. Participants had an average baseline Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score of 19, with a Dermatology Life Quality Index score of about 12. At the top dose of 12 mg once daily, 75% of patients achieved a PASI 75 response at week 12, and 44% reached a PASI 90, as did 69% and 44%, respectively, who were on deucravacitinib at 3 mg twice daily. Those are collective efficacy numbers similar to adalimumab (Humira) or ustekinumab (Stelara).

Deucravacitinib may provide efficacy “like one of our second-tier biological therapies, yet it will be oral,” Dr. Strober commented.



Importantly, no laboratory abnormalities were detected in this trial. Only mild side effects were documented, most prominently acne, which occurred in dose-dependent fashion in 2% of patients on 3 mg of deucravacitinib twice daily and 4% at 12 mg once daily.

“The treatment of the acne that is elicited by this drug is yet to be fully described, but I’m sure we’ll learn the best approaches, given that acne is in our wheel house,” the dermatologist added.

Bristol-Myers Squibb has announced positive results from the pivotal phase 3 POETYK PSO-1 trial. Deucravacitinib at 6 mg once daily met both of its coprimary efficacy endpoints in the study, which included 666 patients with moderate to severe psoriasis. The TYK 2 inhibitor demonstrated superiority to both placebo and oral apremilast (Otezla) at week 16. The company said the safety profile was consistent with the phase 2 results, and that the full details of the phase 3 trial will be presented next year at a major medical meeting.

In addition, positive phase 2 results were reported for deucravacitinib in the treatment of psoriatic arthritis in a randomized trial presented at the fall 2020 meeting of the American College of Rheumatology. Deucravacitinib is also under study for lupus and inflammatory bowel disease.

Dr. Strober, an active clinical trialist, reported serving as a consultant to more than two dozen pharmaceutical companies, including Bristol-Myers Squibb.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Deucravacitinib, a first-in-class oral selective tyrosine kinase 2 inhibitor, shows considerable promise as a potential novel treatment for psoriasis and a range of other chronic inflammatory diseases, Bruce E. Strober, MD, PhD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Dr. Bruce Strober professor and chair of dermatology at the University of Connecticut, Farmington
Dr. Bruce Strober

Deucravacitinib solely blocks tyrosine kinase 2 (TYK2) signaling without touching Janus kinase (JAK) 1, 2, or 3. In so doing, it inhibits several cytokines important for inflammation: interleukin-12, IL-13, and interferon-alpha and -beta. Yet it doesn’t affect the numerous pathways mediated by JAKs 1-3, many of which relate to growth and development of cell lineages, including production of erythropoietin, thrombopoietin, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, prolactin, growth hormone, and leptin. These deucravacitinib characteristics should translate into fewer off-target side effects than with oral JAK inhibitors.

“The promise of TYK2 inhibition that’s brought to you by deucravacitinib is there will be no laboratory monitoring and the effects will be narrow in blocking inflammation,” said Dr. Strober, a dermatologist at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and in private practice in Cromwell, Conn.

He highlighted the positive results of a randomized, phase 2, dose-ranging study conducted in 267 patients with moderate or severe plaque psoriasis. Participants had an average baseline Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score of 19, with a Dermatology Life Quality Index score of about 12. At the top dose of 12 mg once daily, 75% of patients achieved a PASI 75 response at week 12, and 44% reached a PASI 90, as did 69% and 44%, respectively, who were on deucravacitinib at 3 mg twice daily. Those are collective efficacy numbers similar to adalimumab (Humira) or ustekinumab (Stelara).

Deucravacitinib may provide efficacy “like one of our second-tier biological therapies, yet it will be oral,” Dr. Strober commented.



Importantly, no laboratory abnormalities were detected in this trial. Only mild side effects were documented, most prominently acne, which occurred in dose-dependent fashion in 2% of patients on 3 mg of deucravacitinib twice daily and 4% at 12 mg once daily.

“The treatment of the acne that is elicited by this drug is yet to be fully described, but I’m sure we’ll learn the best approaches, given that acne is in our wheel house,” the dermatologist added.

Bristol-Myers Squibb has announced positive results from the pivotal phase 3 POETYK PSO-1 trial. Deucravacitinib at 6 mg once daily met both of its coprimary efficacy endpoints in the study, which included 666 patients with moderate to severe psoriasis. The TYK 2 inhibitor demonstrated superiority to both placebo and oral apremilast (Otezla) at week 16. The company said the safety profile was consistent with the phase 2 results, and that the full details of the phase 3 trial will be presented next year at a major medical meeting.

In addition, positive phase 2 results were reported for deucravacitinib in the treatment of psoriatic arthritis in a randomized trial presented at the fall 2020 meeting of the American College of Rheumatology. Deucravacitinib is also under study for lupus and inflammatory bowel disease.

Dr. Strober, an active clinical trialist, reported serving as a consultant to more than two dozen pharmaceutical companies, including Bristol-Myers Squibb.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Deucravacitinib, a first-in-class oral selective tyrosine kinase 2 inhibitor, shows considerable promise as a potential novel treatment for psoriasis and a range of other chronic inflammatory diseases, Bruce E. Strober, MD, PhD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Dr. Bruce Strober professor and chair of dermatology at the University of Connecticut, Farmington
Dr. Bruce Strober

Deucravacitinib solely blocks tyrosine kinase 2 (TYK2) signaling without touching Janus kinase (JAK) 1, 2, or 3. In so doing, it inhibits several cytokines important for inflammation: interleukin-12, IL-13, and interferon-alpha and -beta. Yet it doesn’t affect the numerous pathways mediated by JAKs 1-3, many of which relate to growth and development of cell lineages, including production of erythropoietin, thrombopoietin, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, prolactin, growth hormone, and leptin. These deucravacitinib characteristics should translate into fewer off-target side effects than with oral JAK inhibitors.

“The promise of TYK2 inhibition that’s brought to you by deucravacitinib is there will be no laboratory monitoring and the effects will be narrow in blocking inflammation,” said Dr. Strober, a dermatologist at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and in private practice in Cromwell, Conn.

He highlighted the positive results of a randomized, phase 2, dose-ranging study conducted in 267 patients with moderate or severe plaque psoriasis. Participants had an average baseline Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score of 19, with a Dermatology Life Quality Index score of about 12. At the top dose of 12 mg once daily, 75% of patients achieved a PASI 75 response at week 12, and 44% reached a PASI 90, as did 69% and 44%, respectively, who were on deucravacitinib at 3 mg twice daily. Those are collective efficacy numbers similar to adalimumab (Humira) or ustekinumab (Stelara).

Deucravacitinib may provide efficacy “like one of our second-tier biological therapies, yet it will be oral,” Dr. Strober commented.



Importantly, no laboratory abnormalities were detected in this trial. Only mild side effects were documented, most prominently acne, which occurred in dose-dependent fashion in 2% of patients on 3 mg of deucravacitinib twice daily and 4% at 12 mg once daily.

“The treatment of the acne that is elicited by this drug is yet to be fully described, but I’m sure we’ll learn the best approaches, given that acne is in our wheel house,” the dermatologist added.

Bristol-Myers Squibb has announced positive results from the pivotal phase 3 POETYK PSO-1 trial. Deucravacitinib at 6 mg once daily met both of its coprimary efficacy endpoints in the study, which included 666 patients with moderate to severe psoriasis. The TYK 2 inhibitor demonstrated superiority to both placebo and oral apremilast (Otezla) at week 16. The company said the safety profile was consistent with the phase 2 results, and that the full details of the phase 3 trial will be presented next year at a major medical meeting.

In addition, positive phase 2 results were reported for deucravacitinib in the treatment of psoriatic arthritis in a randomized trial presented at the fall 2020 meeting of the American College of Rheumatology. Deucravacitinib is also under study for lupus and inflammatory bowel disease.

Dr. Strober, an active clinical trialist, reported serving as a consultant to more than two dozen pharmaceutical companies, including Bristol-Myers Squibb.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Telltale dermoscopic features of melanomas lacking pigment reviewed

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Dermoscopic evaluation for detection of hypomelanotic and amelanotic melanomas is less accurate than for pigmented melanomas, but its utility can be boosted by familiarity with a handful of dermoscopic features specific to melanomas lacking significant pigment, Steven Q. Wang, MD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Dr. Steven Q. Wang, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Basking Ridge, NJ
Dr. Steven Q. Wang

These features emerged from a major study conducted on five continents by members of the International Dermoscopy Society. The investigators developed a simple, eight-variable model, which demonstrated a sensitivity of 70% and specificity of 56% for diagnosis of melanoma. And while that’s a markedly worse performance than when dermoscopy is used for detection of pigmented melanomas, where sensitivities in excess of 90% and specificities greater than 70% are typical, it’s nonetheless a significant improvement over naked-eye evaluation of these challenging pigment-deprived melanomas, noted Dr. Wang, director of dermatologic surgery and dermatology at Memorial Sloan Kettering Basking Ridge (N.J.)

Using the predictive model developed in the international study to evaluate lesions lacking pigment, a diagnosis of melanoma is made provided two conditions are met: The lesion can have no more than three milia-like cysts, and it has to possess one or more of seven positive dermoscopic findings. The strongest predictor of melanoma in the study was the presence of a blue-white veil, which in univariate analysis was associated with a 13-fold increased likelihood of melanoma.

The other positive predictors were irregularly shaped depigmentation, more than one shade of pink, predominant central vessels, irregularly sized or distributed brown dots or globules, multiple blue-gray dots, and dotted and linear irregular vessels.

Dr. Wang emphasized that, when dermoscopy and clinical skin examination of a featureless hypomelanotic or amelanotic lesion yield ambiguous findings, frequent vigilant follow-up is a viable strategy to detect early melanoma – provided the lesion is superficial.

“The reality is not all melanomas are the same. The superficial spreading melanomas and lentigo melanomas grow very, very slowly: less than 0.1 mm per month. Those are the types of lesions you can monitor. But there is one type of lesion you should never, ever monitor: nodular lesions. They are the type of lesions that can do your patient harm because nodular melanomas can grow really fast. So my key takeaway message is, if you see a nodule and you don’t know what it is, take it off,” the dermatologist said.

Dermoscopy in the hands of experienced users has repeatedly been shown to improve diagnostic accuracy by more than 25%. But there is an additional very important reason to embrace dermoscopy in daily clinical practice, according to Dr. Wang: “When you put the scope on an individual, you slow down the exam and patients feels like you’re paying more attention to them.”

That’s worthwhile because the No. 1 complaint voiced by patients who make their way to Sloan Kettering for a second opinion is that their prior skin examination by an outside physician wasn’t thorough. They’re often angry about it. And while it’s true that incorporating dermoscopy does make for a lengthier skin examination, the additional time involved is actually minimal. Dr. Wang cited a randomized, prospective, multicenter study which documented that the median time required to conduct a thorough complete skin examination without dermoscopy was 70 seconds versus 142 seconds with dermoscopy.

Dr. Wang reported having no financial conflicts regarding his presentation.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.
 

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Dermoscopic evaluation for detection of hypomelanotic and amelanotic melanomas is less accurate than for pigmented melanomas, but its utility can be boosted by familiarity with a handful of dermoscopic features specific to melanomas lacking significant pigment, Steven Q. Wang, MD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Dr. Steven Q. Wang, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Basking Ridge, NJ
Dr. Steven Q. Wang

These features emerged from a major study conducted on five continents by members of the International Dermoscopy Society. The investigators developed a simple, eight-variable model, which demonstrated a sensitivity of 70% and specificity of 56% for diagnosis of melanoma. And while that’s a markedly worse performance than when dermoscopy is used for detection of pigmented melanomas, where sensitivities in excess of 90% and specificities greater than 70% are typical, it’s nonetheless a significant improvement over naked-eye evaluation of these challenging pigment-deprived melanomas, noted Dr. Wang, director of dermatologic surgery and dermatology at Memorial Sloan Kettering Basking Ridge (N.J.)

Using the predictive model developed in the international study to evaluate lesions lacking pigment, a diagnosis of melanoma is made provided two conditions are met: The lesion can have no more than three milia-like cysts, and it has to possess one or more of seven positive dermoscopic findings. The strongest predictor of melanoma in the study was the presence of a blue-white veil, which in univariate analysis was associated with a 13-fold increased likelihood of melanoma.

The other positive predictors were irregularly shaped depigmentation, more than one shade of pink, predominant central vessels, irregularly sized or distributed brown dots or globules, multiple blue-gray dots, and dotted and linear irregular vessels.

Dr. Wang emphasized that, when dermoscopy and clinical skin examination of a featureless hypomelanotic or amelanotic lesion yield ambiguous findings, frequent vigilant follow-up is a viable strategy to detect early melanoma – provided the lesion is superficial.

“The reality is not all melanomas are the same. The superficial spreading melanomas and lentigo melanomas grow very, very slowly: less than 0.1 mm per month. Those are the types of lesions you can monitor. But there is one type of lesion you should never, ever monitor: nodular lesions. They are the type of lesions that can do your patient harm because nodular melanomas can grow really fast. So my key takeaway message is, if you see a nodule and you don’t know what it is, take it off,” the dermatologist said.

Dermoscopy in the hands of experienced users has repeatedly been shown to improve diagnostic accuracy by more than 25%. But there is an additional very important reason to embrace dermoscopy in daily clinical practice, according to Dr. Wang: “When you put the scope on an individual, you slow down the exam and patients feels like you’re paying more attention to them.”

That’s worthwhile because the No. 1 complaint voiced by patients who make their way to Sloan Kettering for a second opinion is that their prior skin examination by an outside physician wasn’t thorough. They’re often angry about it. And while it’s true that incorporating dermoscopy does make for a lengthier skin examination, the additional time involved is actually minimal. Dr. Wang cited a randomized, prospective, multicenter study which documented that the median time required to conduct a thorough complete skin examination without dermoscopy was 70 seconds versus 142 seconds with dermoscopy.

Dr. Wang reported having no financial conflicts regarding his presentation.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.
 

Dermoscopic evaluation for detection of hypomelanotic and amelanotic melanomas is less accurate than for pigmented melanomas, but its utility can be boosted by familiarity with a handful of dermoscopic features specific to melanomas lacking significant pigment, Steven Q. Wang, MD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Dr. Steven Q. Wang, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Basking Ridge, NJ
Dr. Steven Q. Wang

These features emerged from a major study conducted on five continents by members of the International Dermoscopy Society. The investigators developed a simple, eight-variable model, which demonstrated a sensitivity of 70% and specificity of 56% for diagnosis of melanoma. And while that’s a markedly worse performance than when dermoscopy is used for detection of pigmented melanomas, where sensitivities in excess of 90% and specificities greater than 70% are typical, it’s nonetheless a significant improvement over naked-eye evaluation of these challenging pigment-deprived melanomas, noted Dr. Wang, director of dermatologic surgery and dermatology at Memorial Sloan Kettering Basking Ridge (N.J.)

Using the predictive model developed in the international study to evaluate lesions lacking pigment, a diagnosis of melanoma is made provided two conditions are met: The lesion can have no more than three milia-like cysts, and it has to possess one or more of seven positive dermoscopic findings. The strongest predictor of melanoma in the study was the presence of a blue-white veil, which in univariate analysis was associated with a 13-fold increased likelihood of melanoma.

The other positive predictors were irregularly shaped depigmentation, more than one shade of pink, predominant central vessels, irregularly sized or distributed brown dots or globules, multiple blue-gray dots, and dotted and linear irregular vessels.

Dr. Wang emphasized that, when dermoscopy and clinical skin examination of a featureless hypomelanotic or amelanotic lesion yield ambiguous findings, frequent vigilant follow-up is a viable strategy to detect early melanoma – provided the lesion is superficial.

“The reality is not all melanomas are the same. The superficial spreading melanomas and lentigo melanomas grow very, very slowly: less than 0.1 mm per month. Those are the types of lesions you can monitor. But there is one type of lesion you should never, ever monitor: nodular lesions. They are the type of lesions that can do your patient harm because nodular melanomas can grow really fast. So my key takeaway message is, if you see a nodule and you don’t know what it is, take it off,” the dermatologist said.

Dermoscopy in the hands of experienced users has repeatedly been shown to improve diagnostic accuracy by more than 25%. But there is an additional very important reason to embrace dermoscopy in daily clinical practice, according to Dr. Wang: “When you put the scope on an individual, you slow down the exam and patients feels like you’re paying more attention to them.”

That’s worthwhile because the No. 1 complaint voiced by patients who make their way to Sloan Kettering for a second opinion is that their prior skin examination by an outside physician wasn’t thorough. They’re often angry about it. And while it’s true that incorporating dermoscopy does make for a lengthier skin examination, the additional time involved is actually minimal. Dr. Wang cited a randomized, prospective, multicenter study which documented that the median time required to conduct a thorough complete skin examination without dermoscopy was 70 seconds versus 142 seconds with dermoscopy.

Dr. Wang reported having no financial conflicts regarding his presentation.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.
 

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Home phototherapy never looked better, expert says

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Home narrow-band UVB has arguably become the best way to deliver phototherapy for psoriasis, Kenneth B. Gordon, MD, asserted at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Professor and Thomas R. Russell Family Chair of Dermatology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
Dr. Kenneth Gordon

“In my practice, I’m using more and more home UVB, and there are a number of reasons for that. It’s more convenient and easier for the patient, as it’s getting more difficult for patients to give up time from work to come to the office. And I might add that, in this time of COVID-19, people don’t want to come to the office. It’s generally less expensive for patients because of copays, which increase the cost of UVB. And believe it or not, I believe it’s easier for the clinician as well. I write a prescription, the patient gets a number of treatments, and I don’t lose any sleep because I think it’s very difficult for patients to get into trouble with narrow-band UVB at home,” explained Dr. Gordon, professor and chair of the department of dermatology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

“There’s all sorts of insurance company silliness in getting this paid for, but if you do get it paid for, I think it’s a really effective way to treat psoriasis,” the dermatologist added.

A Dutch multicenter randomized trial demonstrated that home UVB phototherapy for psoriasis was equally safe and effective as outpatient UVB phototherapy, and with greater patient satisfaction.

Surveys show most dermatologists consider phototherapy their preferred treatment for patients with extensive psoriasis because its side effect profile is so benign, compared with that of systemic therapies, be they biologic agents or older drugs such as methotrexate or acitretin. Phototherapy is particularly popular for use in women of childbearing potential, since it’s a nonsystemic therapy.

And speaking of side effects, Dr. Gordon declared, “The risks of narrow-band UVB are sometimes, I believe, exaggerated.” Indeed, he considers the No. 1 side effect of office-based phototherapy to be the loss of productive time.

“Simply put, phototherapy in the office is very easy for me. I write a prescription, the tech takes care of it, and if there’s a problem I’m handy to see the patient. But for the patient, it’s very difficult. Whereas it might take only a few minutes to get the treatment in-office, it takes a lot of time to get to the office, and many patients don’t have transportation. So I think the loss of productive time with phototherapy has to be considered a side effect,” Dr. Gordon said.

Turning to the therapy’s other side effects, he said that although there is some degree of photoaging associated with narrow-band UVB – which is far and away the most commonly used form of phototherapy in the United States – it’s nothing close to the photoaging caused by PUVA.



“I don’t believe that PUVA, with all the destruction of the skin that you see with it, is a significant part of our treatment modalities today,” Dr. Gordon said.

Sunburn is a risk with narrow-band UVB, especially if the dose is ramped up too quickly. Reactivation of herpes simplex virus infection is a frequent problem, and one patients find especially concerning when it manifests as eruptions of cold sores on the face.

The side effect of narrow-band UVB of greatest interest to most patients and physicians is skin cancer. “This is an extremely controversial area,” the dermatologist observed.

Unlike with PUVA, there has never been a convincing study to show that narrow-band UVB is associated with significantly increased risks of keratinocyte carcinomas or melanoma. A large Scottish study found no significantly increased risk, but a modestly increased trend for more squamous cell carcinomas. How modest? The investigators calculated that it would require 50,000 psoriasis patients with a minimum of 100 narrow-band UVB treatments to be followed for 5 years in order to demonstrate a twofold increased risk of the malignancy.

“In other words, it takes an incredible number of patients to be able to see a difference in a skin cancer that we can relatively easily treat. That’s why when I see patients, I don’t emphasize the risk of skin cancer,” Dr. Gordon said.

Similarly reassuring was a Swedish study, which showed the skin cancer rate in UVB-treated psoriasis patients was no different than in the general population.

Guideline recommendations regarding UVB phototherapy and skin cancer risk are all over the map. French guidelines advise a maximum of 230 narrow-band UVB treatments. British guidelines recommend reducing narrow-band UVB exposure to skin areas with significant sun exposure. American guidelines leave the topic untouched, Dr. Gordon noted.

He reported having no financial conflicts of interest regarding his presentation, as neither he, the Medical College of Wisconsin, or its department of dermatology receive any payment for phototherapy services he prescribes. Those payments go to the hospital system where he works. MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Home narrow-band UVB has arguably become the best way to deliver phototherapy for psoriasis, Kenneth B. Gordon, MD, asserted at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Professor and Thomas R. Russell Family Chair of Dermatology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
Dr. Kenneth Gordon

“In my practice, I’m using more and more home UVB, and there are a number of reasons for that. It’s more convenient and easier for the patient, as it’s getting more difficult for patients to give up time from work to come to the office. And I might add that, in this time of COVID-19, people don’t want to come to the office. It’s generally less expensive for patients because of copays, which increase the cost of UVB. And believe it or not, I believe it’s easier for the clinician as well. I write a prescription, the patient gets a number of treatments, and I don’t lose any sleep because I think it’s very difficult for patients to get into trouble with narrow-band UVB at home,” explained Dr. Gordon, professor and chair of the department of dermatology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

“There’s all sorts of insurance company silliness in getting this paid for, but if you do get it paid for, I think it’s a really effective way to treat psoriasis,” the dermatologist added.

A Dutch multicenter randomized trial demonstrated that home UVB phototherapy for psoriasis was equally safe and effective as outpatient UVB phototherapy, and with greater patient satisfaction.

Surveys show most dermatologists consider phototherapy their preferred treatment for patients with extensive psoriasis because its side effect profile is so benign, compared with that of systemic therapies, be they biologic agents or older drugs such as methotrexate or acitretin. Phototherapy is particularly popular for use in women of childbearing potential, since it’s a nonsystemic therapy.

And speaking of side effects, Dr. Gordon declared, “The risks of narrow-band UVB are sometimes, I believe, exaggerated.” Indeed, he considers the No. 1 side effect of office-based phototherapy to be the loss of productive time.

“Simply put, phototherapy in the office is very easy for me. I write a prescription, the tech takes care of it, and if there’s a problem I’m handy to see the patient. But for the patient, it’s very difficult. Whereas it might take only a few minutes to get the treatment in-office, it takes a lot of time to get to the office, and many patients don’t have transportation. So I think the loss of productive time with phototherapy has to be considered a side effect,” Dr. Gordon said.

Turning to the therapy’s other side effects, he said that although there is some degree of photoaging associated with narrow-band UVB – which is far and away the most commonly used form of phototherapy in the United States – it’s nothing close to the photoaging caused by PUVA.



“I don’t believe that PUVA, with all the destruction of the skin that you see with it, is a significant part of our treatment modalities today,” Dr. Gordon said.

Sunburn is a risk with narrow-band UVB, especially if the dose is ramped up too quickly. Reactivation of herpes simplex virus infection is a frequent problem, and one patients find especially concerning when it manifests as eruptions of cold sores on the face.

The side effect of narrow-band UVB of greatest interest to most patients and physicians is skin cancer. “This is an extremely controversial area,” the dermatologist observed.

Unlike with PUVA, there has never been a convincing study to show that narrow-band UVB is associated with significantly increased risks of keratinocyte carcinomas or melanoma. A large Scottish study found no significantly increased risk, but a modestly increased trend for more squamous cell carcinomas. How modest? The investigators calculated that it would require 50,000 psoriasis patients with a minimum of 100 narrow-band UVB treatments to be followed for 5 years in order to demonstrate a twofold increased risk of the malignancy.

“In other words, it takes an incredible number of patients to be able to see a difference in a skin cancer that we can relatively easily treat. That’s why when I see patients, I don’t emphasize the risk of skin cancer,” Dr. Gordon said.

Similarly reassuring was a Swedish study, which showed the skin cancer rate in UVB-treated psoriasis patients was no different than in the general population.

Guideline recommendations regarding UVB phototherapy and skin cancer risk are all over the map. French guidelines advise a maximum of 230 narrow-band UVB treatments. British guidelines recommend reducing narrow-band UVB exposure to skin areas with significant sun exposure. American guidelines leave the topic untouched, Dr. Gordon noted.

He reported having no financial conflicts of interest regarding his presentation, as neither he, the Medical College of Wisconsin, or its department of dermatology receive any payment for phototherapy services he prescribes. Those payments go to the hospital system where he works. MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Home narrow-band UVB has arguably become the best way to deliver phototherapy for psoriasis, Kenneth B. Gordon, MD, asserted at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Professor and Thomas R. Russell Family Chair of Dermatology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
Dr. Kenneth Gordon

“In my practice, I’m using more and more home UVB, and there are a number of reasons for that. It’s more convenient and easier for the patient, as it’s getting more difficult for patients to give up time from work to come to the office. And I might add that, in this time of COVID-19, people don’t want to come to the office. It’s generally less expensive for patients because of copays, which increase the cost of UVB. And believe it or not, I believe it’s easier for the clinician as well. I write a prescription, the patient gets a number of treatments, and I don’t lose any sleep because I think it’s very difficult for patients to get into trouble with narrow-band UVB at home,” explained Dr. Gordon, professor and chair of the department of dermatology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

“There’s all sorts of insurance company silliness in getting this paid for, but if you do get it paid for, I think it’s a really effective way to treat psoriasis,” the dermatologist added.

A Dutch multicenter randomized trial demonstrated that home UVB phototherapy for psoriasis was equally safe and effective as outpatient UVB phototherapy, and with greater patient satisfaction.

Surveys show most dermatologists consider phototherapy their preferred treatment for patients with extensive psoriasis because its side effect profile is so benign, compared with that of systemic therapies, be they biologic agents or older drugs such as methotrexate or acitretin. Phototherapy is particularly popular for use in women of childbearing potential, since it’s a nonsystemic therapy.

And speaking of side effects, Dr. Gordon declared, “The risks of narrow-band UVB are sometimes, I believe, exaggerated.” Indeed, he considers the No. 1 side effect of office-based phototherapy to be the loss of productive time.

“Simply put, phototherapy in the office is very easy for me. I write a prescription, the tech takes care of it, and if there’s a problem I’m handy to see the patient. But for the patient, it’s very difficult. Whereas it might take only a few minutes to get the treatment in-office, it takes a lot of time to get to the office, and many patients don’t have transportation. So I think the loss of productive time with phototherapy has to be considered a side effect,” Dr. Gordon said.

Turning to the therapy’s other side effects, he said that although there is some degree of photoaging associated with narrow-band UVB – which is far and away the most commonly used form of phototherapy in the United States – it’s nothing close to the photoaging caused by PUVA.



“I don’t believe that PUVA, with all the destruction of the skin that you see with it, is a significant part of our treatment modalities today,” Dr. Gordon said.

Sunburn is a risk with narrow-band UVB, especially if the dose is ramped up too quickly. Reactivation of herpes simplex virus infection is a frequent problem, and one patients find especially concerning when it manifests as eruptions of cold sores on the face.

The side effect of narrow-band UVB of greatest interest to most patients and physicians is skin cancer. “This is an extremely controversial area,” the dermatologist observed.

Unlike with PUVA, there has never been a convincing study to show that narrow-band UVB is associated with significantly increased risks of keratinocyte carcinomas or melanoma. A large Scottish study found no significantly increased risk, but a modestly increased trend for more squamous cell carcinomas. How modest? The investigators calculated that it would require 50,000 psoriasis patients with a minimum of 100 narrow-band UVB treatments to be followed for 5 years in order to demonstrate a twofold increased risk of the malignancy.

“In other words, it takes an incredible number of patients to be able to see a difference in a skin cancer that we can relatively easily treat. That’s why when I see patients, I don’t emphasize the risk of skin cancer,” Dr. Gordon said.

Similarly reassuring was a Swedish study, which showed the skin cancer rate in UVB-treated psoriasis patients was no different than in the general population.

Guideline recommendations regarding UVB phototherapy and skin cancer risk are all over the map. French guidelines advise a maximum of 230 narrow-band UVB treatments. British guidelines recommend reducing narrow-band UVB exposure to skin areas with significant sun exposure. American guidelines leave the topic untouched, Dr. Gordon noted.

He reported having no financial conflicts of interest regarding his presentation, as neither he, the Medical College of Wisconsin, or its department of dermatology receive any payment for phototherapy services he prescribes. Those payments go to the hospital system where he works. MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Acute-on-chronic itch is new frontier in atopic dermatitis

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Activated circulating basophils appear to play a key role in mediating the underappreciated phenomenon of acute-on-chronic itch flares in atopic dermatitis, Brian S. Kim, MD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Recent years have brought enormous progress in understanding how chronic itch in patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) is mediated by type 2 cytokines, including interleukin-13, IL-4, and IL-31, as well as by Janus kinase (JAK) signaling. This has led to development of potent therapies targeting these mediators, including dupilumab (Dupixent) and the investigational agents tralokinumab, lebrikizumab, abrocitinib, upadacitinib, baricitinib, and the IL-31 inhibitor nemolizumab.

“This is now one of the most active areas in the field of dermatology,” observed Dr. Kim, a dermatologist and codirector of the Center for the Study of Itch and Sensory Disorders at Washington University in St. Louis.

He has figured prominently in this effort. He and his coinvestigators conducted translational studies in mouse models which unraveled key mechanisms by which the immune system responsible for skin inflammation in AD communicates with the nervous system to trigger the neural sensation of itch. He also led a phase 2 randomized trial in 307 patients with AD, which demonstrated that the investigational JAK1/JAK2 inhibitor ruxolitinib cream markedly improved itch within 36 hours, well before subsequent improvement in skin inflammation – and the topical JAK inhibitor did so with minimal systemic absorption.

Compared with chronic itch, much less research attention has been devoted to the phenomenon of acute itch flares superimposed upon the chronic itch of AD. These acute-on-chronic itch flares are a common feature of the disease. In a soon-to-be-published study of 159 AD patients in the placebo arm of a clinical trial, Dr. Kim and coinvestigators found that 26% exhibited a pattern of acute itch flares during the course of a single month. During the next month, 3.1% of patients under study went from an acute-on-chronic itch pattern in month 1 to a nonflare pattern, 20% went from a nonflare pattern in month 1 to acute itch flares in month 2, and 23% of the overall study population retained their pattern of acute itch flares through both months.

Brian Kim, MD, department of dermatology, Washington University St. Louis, and codrector of the Center for the Study of Itch.

“This does not seem to be just a static phenotype, but rather these patients can evolve over time. And we think that this can be driven by allergen-specific IgE,” according to Dr. Kim.

Indeed, the investigators found that patients with allergen-specific IgE in their serum were roughly twice as likely to exhibit the acute-on-chronic itch flare pattern than those without allergen-specific IgE.

The classical thinking has been that IgE binds to its receptors on mast cells, causing mast cell degranulation and release of histamine and other itch-inducing molecules. Yet antihistamines have proven notoriously ineffective for the treatment of AD.

Circulating basophils capable of working their way into inflamed skin also have IgE receptors. Dr. Kim and colleagues have shown that allergen-specific IgE in mice binds to those receptors, causing the basophils to degenerate, releasing itch-promoting chemicals. They have subsequently carried over this work into the clinical arena.

“We’ve found that patients with atopic dermatitis have significantly higher expression of receptors for IgE in their basophils than in the basophils of healthy controls, indicating perhaps that the basophils in patients with atopic dermatitis are much more prone to stimulation by allergen by way of IgE. This is a new concept that we’re exploring,” Dr. Kim said.



“We haven’t really known before what IgE does in atopic dermatitis, but it turns out that it may actually play a very important role in triggering acute flares of itch,” the dermatologist explained. “What’s been surprising is that the IgE activity is not mediated so much by mast cells, which are tissue-resident; the predominant means appears to be that IgE acts on basophils. That then creates release not of histamine, but of leukotriene C4, which is a very potent pruritogen. This may be responsible for those acute itch flares.”

Asked during an audience Q&A how allergen-specific IgE–mediated basophil activation might be targeted therapeutically in order to prevent acute-on-chronic itch flares in patients with AD, Dr. Kim mentioned two possibilities. One is treatment with potent anti-IgE agents, which to date have not been adequately tested for their antipruritic prowess in AD.

“Also, there’s another molecule that seems to be relatively basophil-selective and -specific that’s just been discovered by my colleague Xinzhong Dong at Johns Hopkins University [in Baltimore] – called MRGPRX2 – that may actually be a potentially viable way to go after basophils, maybe even by depleting them if you had an antibody against that,” Dr. Kim said. He was a coinvestigator in Dr. Dong’s recent study characterizing MRGPRX2, the mast-cell-expressed Mas-related G-protein–coupled receptor activator.

Dr. Kim reported receiving research funding from Cara Therapeutics and LEO Pharma, holding a patent for the use of JAK inhibitors in chronic itch, and serving as a consultant to numerous pharmaceutical companies.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Activated circulating basophils appear to play a key role in mediating the underappreciated phenomenon of acute-on-chronic itch flares in atopic dermatitis, Brian S. Kim, MD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Recent years have brought enormous progress in understanding how chronic itch in patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) is mediated by type 2 cytokines, including interleukin-13, IL-4, and IL-31, as well as by Janus kinase (JAK) signaling. This has led to development of potent therapies targeting these mediators, including dupilumab (Dupixent) and the investigational agents tralokinumab, lebrikizumab, abrocitinib, upadacitinib, baricitinib, and the IL-31 inhibitor nemolizumab.

“This is now one of the most active areas in the field of dermatology,” observed Dr. Kim, a dermatologist and codirector of the Center for the Study of Itch and Sensory Disorders at Washington University in St. Louis.

He has figured prominently in this effort. He and his coinvestigators conducted translational studies in mouse models which unraveled key mechanisms by which the immune system responsible for skin inflammation in AD communicates with the nervous system to trigger the neural sensation of itch. He also led a phase 2 randomized trial in 307 patients with AD, which demonstrated that the investigational JAK1/JAK2 inhibitor ruxolitinib cream markedly improved itch within 36 hours, well before subsequent improvement in skin inflammation – and the topical JAK inhibitor did so with minimal systemic absorption.

Compared with chronic itch, much less research attention has been devoted to the phenomenon of acute itch flares superimposed upon the chronic itch of AD. These acute-on-chronic itch flares are a common feature of the disease. In a soon-to-be-published study of 159 AD patients in the placebo arm of a clinical trial, Dr. Kim and coinvestigators found that 26% exhibited a pattern of acute itch flares during the course of a single month. During the next month, 3.1% of patients under study went from an acute-on-chronic itch pattern in month 1 to a nonflare pattern, 20% went from a nonflare pattern in month 1 to acute itch flares in month 2, and 23% of the overall study population retained their pattern of acute itch flares through both months.

Brian Kim, MD, department of dermatology, Washington University St. Louis, and codrector of the Center for the Study of Itch.

“This does not seem to be just a static phenotype, but rather these patients can evolve over time. And we think that this can be driven by allergen-specific IgE,” according to Dr. Kim.

Indeed, the investigators found that patients with allergen-specific IgE in their serum were roughly twice as likely to exhibit the acute-on-chronic itch flare pattern than those without allergen-specific IgE.

The classical thinking has been that IgE binds to its receptors on mast cells, causing mast cell degranulation and release of histamine and other itch-inducing molecules. Yet antihistamines have proven notoriously ineffective for the treatment of AD.

Circulating basophils capable of working their way into inflamed skin also have IgE receptors. Dr. Kim and colleagues have shown that allergen-specific IgE in mice binds to those receptors, causing the basophils to degenerate, releasing itch-promoting chemicals. They have subsequently carried over this work into the clinical arena.

“We’ve found that patients with atopic dermatitis have significantly higher expression of receptors for IgE in their basophils than in the basophils of healthy controls, indicating perhaps that the basophils in patients with atopic dermatitis are much more prone to stimulation by allergen by way of IgE. This is a new concept that we’re exploring,” Dr. Kim said.



“We haven’t really known before what IgE does in atopic dermatitis, but it turns out that it may actually play a very important role in triggering acute flares of itch,” the dermatologist explained. “What’s been surprising is that the IgE activity is not mediated so much by mast cells, which are tissue-resident; the predominant means appears to be that IgE acts on basophils. That then creates release not of histamine, but of leukotriene C4, which is a very potent pruritogen. This may be responsible for those acute itch flares.”

Asked during an audience Q&A how allergen-specific IgE–mediated basophil activation might be targeted therapeutically in order to prevent acute-on-chronic itch flares in patients with AD, Dr. Kim mentioned two possibilities. One is treatment with potent anti-IgE agents, which to date have not been adequately tested for their antipruritic prowess in AD.

“Also, there’s another molecule that seems to be relatively basophil-selective and -specific that’s just been discovered by my colleague Xinzhong Dong at Johns Hopkins University [in Baltimore] – called MRGPRX2 – that may actually be a potentially viable way to go after basophils, maybe even by depleting them if you had an antibody against that,” Dr. Kim said. He was a coinvestigator in Dr. Dong’s recent study characterizing MRGPRX2, the mast-cell-expressed Mas-related G-protein–coupled receptor activator.

Dr. Kim reported receiving research funding from Cara Therapeutics and LEO Pharma, holding a patent for the use of JAK inhibitors in chronic itch, and serving as a consultant to numerous pharmaceutical companies.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Activated circulating basophils appear to play a key role in mediating the underappreciated phenomenon of acute-on-chronic itch flares in atopic dermatitis, Brian S. Kim, MD, said at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Recent years have brought enormous progress in understanding how chronic itch in patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) is mediated by type 2 cytokines, including interleukin-13, IL-4, and IL-31, as well as by Janus kinase (JAK) signaling. This has led to development of potent therapies targeting these mediators, including dupilumab (Dupixent) and the investigational agents tralokinumab, lebrikizumab, abrocitinib, upadacitinib, baricitinib, and the IL-31 inhibitor nemolizumab.

“This is now one of the most active areas in the field of dermatology,” observed Dr. Kim, a dermatologist and codirector of the Center for the Study of Itch and Sensory Disorders at Washington University in St. Louis.

He has figured prominently in this effort. He and his coinvestigators conducted translational studies in mouse models which unraveled key mechanisms by which the immune system responsible for skin inflammation in AD communicates with the nervous system to trigger the neural sensation of itch. He also led a phase 2 randomized trial in 307 patients with AD, which demonstrated that the investigational JAK1/JAK2 inhibitor ruxolitinib cream markedly improved itch within 36 hours, well before subsequent improvement in skin inflammation – and the topical JAK inhibitor did so with minimal systemic absorption.

Compared with chronic itch, much less research attention has been devoted to the phenomenon of acute itch flares superimposed upon the chronic itch of AD. These acute-on-chronic itch flares are a common feature of the disease. In a soon-to-be-published study of 159 AD patients in the placebo arm of a clinical trial, Dr. Kim and coinvestigators found that 26% exhibited a pattern of acute itch flares during the course of a single month. During the next month, 3.1% of patients under study went from an acute-on-chronic itch pattern in month 1 to a nonflare pattern, 20% went from a nonflare pattern in month 1 to acute itch flares in month 2, and 23% of the overall study population retained their pattern of acute itch flares through both months.

Brian Kim, MD, department of dermatology, Washington University St. Louis, and codrector of the Center for the Study of Itch.

“This does not seem to be just a static phenotype, but rather these patients can evolve over time. And we think that this can be driven by allergen-specific IgE,” according to Dr. Kim.

Indeed, the investigators found that patients with allergen-specific IgE in their serum were roughly twice as likely to exhibit the acute-on-chronic itch flare pattern than those without allergen-specific IgE.

The classical thinking has been that IgE binds to its receptors on mast cells, causing mast cell degranulation and release of histamine and other itch-inducing molecules. Yet antihistamines have proven notoriously ineffective for the treatment of AD.

Circulating basophils capable of working their way into inflamed skin also have IgE receptors. Dr. Kim and colleagues have shown that allergen-specific IgE in mice binds to those receptors, causing the basophils to degenerate, releasing itch-promoting chemicals. They have subsequently carried over this work into the clinical arena.

“We’ve found that patients with atopic dermatitis have significantly higher expression of receptors for IgE in their basophils than in the basophils of healthy controls, indicating perhaps that the basophils in patients with atopic dermatitis are much more prone to stimulation by allergen by way of IgE. This is a new concept that we’re exploring,” Dr. Kim said.



“We haven’t really known before what IgE does in atopic dermatitis, but it turns out that it may actually play a very important role in triggering acute flares of itch,” the dermatologist explained. “What’s been surprising is that the IgE activity is not mediated so much by mast cells, which are tissue-resident; the predominant means appears to be that IgE acts on basophils. That then creates release not of histamine, but of leukotriene C4, which is a very potent pruritogen. This may be responsible for those acute itch flares.”

Asked during an audience Q&A how allergen-specific IgE–mediated basophil activation might be targeted therapeutically in order to prevent acute-on-chronic itch flares in patients with AD, Dr. Kim mentioned two possibilities. One is treatment with potent anti-IgE agents, which to date have not been adequately tested for their antipruritic prowess in AD.

“Also, there’s another molecule that seems to be relatively basophil-selective and -specific that’s just been discovered by my colleague Xinzhong Dong at Johns Hopkins University [in Baltimore] – called MRGPRX2 – that may actually be a potentially viable way to go after basophils, maybe even by depleting them if you had an antibody against that,” Dr. Kim said. He was a coinvestigator in Dr. Dong’s recent study characterizing MRGPRX2, the mast-cell-expressed Mas-related G-protein–coupled receptor activator.

Dr. Kim reported receiving research funding from Cara Therapeutics and LEO Pharma, holding a patent for the use of JAK inhibitors in chronic itch, and serving as a consultant to numerous pharmaceutical companies.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Novel topical acne combo hits marks in phase 3 trials

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A novel proprietary topical combination of microencapsulated 3% benzoyl peroxide and microencapsulated 0.1% tretinoin achieved its efficacy and safety endpoints in two large pivotal phase 3 clinical acne trials, James Del Rosso, MD, reported at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Acne on the forehead
olavs/Thinkstock

Sol-Gel Technologies, the Israeli company developing the fixed-dose cream, called Twyneo, has applied to the Food and Drug Administration for marketing approval.

The product combines two workhorse topical agents for the treatment of acne, which are ordinarily incompatible, since benzoyl peroxide degrades tretinoin and reduces its effectiveness. The company’s silica-based microencapsulation technology overcomes that obstacle, explained Dr. Del Rosso, a dermatologist at JDR Research in Las Vegas.

The two identical phase 3, randomized, double-blind, vehicle-controlled clinical trials included a total of 858 patients ages 9 years and older with moderate to severe acne enrolled at 63 U.S. sites. Participants were randomized 2:1 to once-daily application of Twyneo or its vehicle cream for 12 weeks.



In one trial, the coprimary endpoint of at least a two-grade reduction and clear or almost clear skin at week 12 on a 5-point Investigator Global Assessment (IGA) scale was achieved in 38.5% of patients on Twyneo and 11.5% of controls. In the other trial, the IGA success rates were 25.4% and 14.7%. In both trials, the between-group difference was statistically significant.

The other coprimary endpoints were the absolute change from baseline in inflammatory and noninflammatory lesion counts. Inflammatory lesions were reduced by 21.6% and 16.2% in the active treatment arms of the two trials, compared with 14.8% and 14.1% reductions in the control groups. Noninflammatory lesion counts fell by 29.7% and 24.2% in patients on active treatment, versus 19.8% and 17.4% reductions in controls. The between-group differences were statistically significant.

Skin tolerability of Twyneo was “very good” and similar to vehicle, according to Dr. Del Rosso.

He reported receiving research funding from Sol-Gel, the studies’ sponsor.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

bjancin@mdedge.com

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A novel proprietary topical combination of microencapsulated 3% benzoyl peroxide and microencapsulated 0.1% tretinoin achieved its efficacy and safety endpoints in two large pivotal phase 3 clinical acne trials, James Del Rosso, MD, reported at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Acne on the forehead
olavs/Thinkstock

Sol-Gel Technologies, the Israeli company developing the fixed-dose cream, called Twyneo, has applied to the Food and Drug Administration for marketing approval.

The product combines two workhorse topical agents for the treatment of acne, which are ordinarily incompatible, since benzoyl peroxide degrades tretinoin and reduces its effectiveness. The company’s silica-based microencapsulation technology overcomes that obstacle, explained Dr. Del Rosso, a dermatologist at JDR Research in Las Vegas.

The two identical phase 3, randomized, double-blind, vehicle-controlled clinical trials included a total of 858 patients ages 9 years and older with moderate to severe acne enrolled at 63 U.S. sites. Participants were randomized 2:1 to once-daily application of Twyneo or its vehicle cream for 12 weeks.



In one trial, the coprimary endpoint of at least a two-grade reduction and clear or almost clear skin at week 12 on a 5-point Investigator Global Assessment (IGA) scale was achieved in 38.5% of patients on Twyneo and 11.5% of controls. In the other trial, the IGA success rates were 25.4% and 14.7%. In both trials, the between-group difference was statistically significant.

The other coprimary endpoints were the absolute change from baseline in inflammatory and noninflammatory lesion counts. Inflammatory lesions were reduced by 21.6% and 16.2% in the active treatment arms of the two trials, compared with 14.8% and 14.1% reductions in the control groups. Noninflammatory lesion counts fell by 29.7% and 24.2% in patients on active treatment, versus 19.8% and 17.4% reductions in controls. The between-group differences were statistically significant.

Skin tolerability of Twyneo was “very good” and similar to vehicle, according to Dr. Del Rosso.

He reported receiving research funding from Sol-Gel, the studies’ sponsor.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

bjancin@mdedge.com

A novel proprietary topical combination of microencapsulated 3% benzoyl peroxide and microencapsulated 0.1% tretinoin achieved its efficacy and safety endpoints in two large pivotal phase 3 clinical acne trials, James Del Rosso, MD, reported at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year.

Acne on the forehead
olavs/Thinkstock

Sol-Gel Technologies, the Israeli company developing the fixed-dose cream, called Twyneo, has applied to the Food and Drug Administration for marketing approval.

The product combines two workhorse topical agents for the treatment of acne, which are ordinarily incompatible, since benzoyl peroxide degrades tretinoin and reduces its effectiveness. The company’s silica-based microencapsulation technology overcomes that obstacle, explained Dr. Del Rosso, a dermatologist at JDR Research in Las Vegas.

The two identical phase 3, randomized, double-blind, vehicle-controlled clinical trials included a total of 858 patients ages 9 years and older with moderate to severe acne enrolled at 63 U.S. sites. Participants were randomized 2:1 to once-daily application of Twyneo or its vehicle cream for 12 weeks.



In one trial, the coprimary endpoint of at least a two-grade reduction and clear or almost clear skin at week 12 on a 5-point Investigator Global Assessment (IGA) scale was achieved in 38.5% of patients on Twyneo and 11.5% of controls. In the other trial, the IGA success rates were 25.4% and 14.7%. In both trials, the between-group difference was statistically significant.

The other coprimary endpoints were the absolute change from baseline in inflammatory and noninflammatory lesion counts. Inflammatory lesions were reduced by 21.6% and 16.2% in the active treatment arms of the two trials, compared with 14.8% and 14.1% reductions in the control groups. Noninflammatory lesion counts fell by 29.7% and 24.2% in patients on active treatment, versus 19.8% and 17.4% reductions in controls. The between-group differences were statistically significant.

Skin tolerability of Twyneo was “very good” and similar to vehicle, according to Dr. Del Rosso.

He reported receiving research funding from Sol-Gel, the studies’ sponsor.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

bjancin@mdedge.com

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Daily sunscreen use will prevent more melanoma deaths than early detection

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The dramatic advances in targeted therapies for late-stage melanoma capture the headlines, but a recent Australian study quietly concluded that the most cost-effective way to lower both the incidence of melanoma and deaths caused by the malignancy over the long haul is through primary prevention in the form of daily sunscreen use, according to Laura Korb Ferris, MD, PhD, a dermatologist and director of clinical trials in the department of dermatology at the University of Pittsburgh.

Wavebreakmedia Ltd/Thinkstock

“I think it’s really important that we recognize the importance of preventing skin cancer, and not just early detection, not just treatment of late disease,” Dr. Ferris said at a virtual forum on cutaneous malignancies jointly presented by Postgraduate Institute for Medicine and Global Academy for Medical Education.

She highlighted the Australian cost-effectiveness analysis, which used Markov modeling of data from two published population-based, randomized controlled trials carried out in Queensland, Australia.

The cost-effectiveness study compared the estimated long-term impact of three different approaches to control of melanoma: a primary prevention strategy, which basically consisted of promoting daily sunscreen use and other forms of sun protection; early detection through annual whole-body skin examinations by physicians starting at age 50; and no intervention. The analysis provided estimates of the number of cases of melanoma, deaths caused by melanoma, nonmelanoma skin cancers, and quality of life outcomes over the course of 30 years starting in 50-year-old men and women.

Primary prevention through sun protection was the clear winner, as shown by the results:

  • A 44% reduction in the incidence of melanoma, compared with early detection via annual physician skin examinations.
  • A 39% reduction in projected melanoma deaths compared with early detection, which in turn achieved only a 2% reduction when compared with no intervention.
  • 27% fewer keratinocyte cancers excised than with annual skin examinations.
  • A 21.7% reduction in societal costs, compared with an early-detection program.

Daily sunscreen use for primary prevention was also associated with a modest 0.1% increase in quality-adjusted life-years. “Prevention is low cost, low risk, and effective,” Dr. Ferris observed.

The investigators noted that, while residents of the Australian state of Queensland are mainly fair-skinned and confront high UV radiation levels throughout the year, somewhat limiting the generalizability of the study findings, the relationships between the costs of interventional strategies and their outcomes should be proportional in other countries.

True enough, but a strategy of annual skin examinations starting at age 50 years as modeled in the Australian study is not the most productive way to conduct a melanoma early-detection program, Dr. Ferris said. She noted that data from the National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program show that the median age at diagnosis of melanoma in the United States is 65 years, while the median age at death caused by the malignancy is 71 years. That information is helpful in formulating strategies to improve early detection through more focused, higher-yield screening.

Dr. Laura Korb Ferris, department of dermatology, University of Pittsburgh
UPMC
Dr. Laura Korb Ferrish

Case in point: European investigators have estimated that, by screening everyone age 50 years and older, 475 people need to be screened and an average of 19.6 lesions must be biopsied in order to detect one melanoma. But by reserving screening for those age 50 years and up who have any one of three risk factors – a personal history of melanoma, atypical nevi, or at least 40 common nevi – those numbers drop dramatically: 98 people need to be screened and 13.5 lesions biopsied to detect one melanoma. And by further narrowing the screened population to those age 65 years or older with any of the three risk factors, 63 seniors would need to be screened and 9.2 lesions excised to find one melanoma.

Total-body skin examinations are time-consuming for dermatologists. In a recent U.S. study, investigators determined that the additional face-to-face time required per skin cancer detected by doing a total-body skin exam in adults who present to a dermatologist for another reason is 4.5 hours. And that’s just the time involved in detecting any type of skin cancer.

“To get that number for melanoma, multiply by 15 to 20,” Dr. Ferris said.

The investigators also determined that, for each decade of advancing age and increment in lighter skin phototype, the number-needed-to-examine in order to identify one skin cancer of any type decreased.



“By focusing on patients who are older and have fair skin types we can get that time down to about 1 hour,” commented Dr. Ferris, who penned an editorial perspective on the study.

While many dermatologists recommend that people with a high common nevus count undergo frequent screening for melanoma because they are at particularly high risk for invasive disease, a couple of recent studies challenge that notion, she pointed out. One was a retrospective study of 326 consecutive new melanoma patients which found that patients with a higher nevus count had thinner melanomas and a greater likelihood of in situ melanoma. Patients who presented with invasive melanoma had a mean total nevus count of 31.5 lesions, while those with in situ melanoma averaged 57.2 nevi. Each additional nevus was associated with a 4% reduction in the likelihood of invasive melanoma, independent of age and sex.

The other study included 566 newly diagnosed melanoma patients in two U.S. centers. Among the 56% of patients who were younger than 60 years, those who had more than 50 total nevi were 68% less likely to have a thick melanoma in a logistic regression analysis that controlled for demographic factors, as well as anatomic location of the melanoma, histologic subtype, and skin cancer screening frequency. In contrast, younger patients with more than 5 atypical nevi were 2.43-fold more likely to have thicker melanomas than were those with no such lesions. The lesson, according to the investigators, is that total nevus count isn’t a reliable determinant of a patient’s risk status or the need for skin examinations.

Dr. Ferris reported no financial conflicts of interest regarding her presentation.

Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same company.

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The dramatic advances in targeted therapies for late-stage melanoma capture the headlines, but a recent Australian study quietly concluded that the most cost-effective way to lower both the incidence of melanoma and deaths caused by the malignancy over the long haul is through primary prevention in the form of daily sunscreen use, according to Laura Korb Ferris, MD, PhD, a dermatologist and director of clinical trials in the department of dermatology at the University of Pittsburgh.

Wavebreakmedia Ltd/Thinkstock

“I think it’s really important that we recognize the importance of preventing skin cancer, and not just early detection, not just treatment of late disease,” Dr. Ferris said at a virtual forum on cutaneous malignancies jointly presented by Postgraduate Institute for Medicine and Global Academy for Medical Education.

She highlighted the Australian cost-effectiveness analysis, which used Markov modeling of data from two published population-based, randomized controlled trials carried out in Queensland, Australia.

The cost-effectiveness study compared the estimated long-term impact of three different approaches to control of melanoma: a primary prevention strategy, which basically consisted of promoting daily sunscreen use and other forms of sun protection; early detection through annual whole-body skin examinations by physicians starting at age 50; and no intervention. The analysis provided estimates of the number of cases of melanoma, deaths caused by melanoma, nonmelanoma skin cancers, and quality of life outcomes over the course of 30 years starting in 50-year-old men and women.

Primary prevention through sun protection was the clear winner, as shown by the results:

  • A 44% reduction in the incidence of melanoma, compared with early detection via annual physician skin examinations.
  • A 39% reduction in projected melanoma deaths compared with early detection, which in turn achieved only a 2% reduction when compared with no intervention.
  • 27% fewer keratinocyte cancers excised than with annual skin examinations.
  • A 21.7% reduction in societal costs, compared with an early-detection program.

Daily sunscreen use for primary prevention was also associated with a modest 0.1% increase in quality-adjusted life-years. “Prevention is low cost, low risk, and effective,” Dr. Ferris observed.

The investigators noted that, while residents of the Australian state of Queensland are mainly fair-skinned and confront high UV radiation levels throughout the year, somewhat limiting the generalizability of the study findings, the relationships between the costs of interventional strategies and their outcomes should be proportional in other countries.

True enough, but a strategy of annual skin examinations starting at age 50 years as modeled in the Australian study is not the most productive way to conduct a melanoma early-detection program, Dr. Ferris said. She noted that data from the National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program show that the median age at diagnosis of melanoma in the United States is 65 years, while the median age at death caused by the malignancy is 71 years. That information is helpful in formulating strategies to improve early detection through more focused, higher-yield screening.

Dr. Laura Korb Ferris, department of dermatology, University of Pittsburgh
UPMC
Dr. Laura Korb Ferrish

Case in point: European investigators have estimated that, by screening everyone age 50 years and older, 475 people need to be screened and an average of 19.6 lesions must be biopsied in order to detect one melanoma. But by reserving screening for those age 50 years and up who have any one of three risk factors – a personal history of melanoma, atypical nevi, or at least 40 common nevi – those numbers drop dramatically: 98 people need to be screened and 13.5 lesions biopsied to detect one melanoma. And by further narrowing the screened population to those age 65 years or older with any of the three risk factors, 63 seniors would need to be screened and 9.2 lesions excised to find one melanoma.

Total-body skin examinations are time-consuming for dermatologists. In a recent U.S. study, investigators determined that the additional face-to-face time required per skin cancer detected by doing a total-body skin exam in adults who present to a dermatologist for another reason is 4.5 hours. And that’s just the time involved in detecting any type of skin cancer.

“To get that number for melanoma, multiply by 15 to 20,” Dr. Ferris said.

The investigators also determined that, for each decade of advancing age and increment in lighter skin phototype, the number-needed-to-examine in order to identify one skin cancer of any type decreased.



“By focusing on patients who are older and have fair skin types we can get that time down to about 1 hour,” commented Dr. Ferris, who penned an editorial perspective on the study.

While many dermatologists recommend that people with a high common nevus count undergo frequent screening for melanoma because they are at particularly high risk for invasive disease, a couple of recent studies challenge that notion, she pointed out. One was a retrospective study of 326 consecutive new melanoma patients which found that patients with a higher nevus count had thinner melanomas and a greater likelihood of in situ melanoma. Patients who presented with invasive melanoma had a mean total nevus count of 31.5 lesions, while those with in situ melanoma averaged 57.2 nevi. Each additional nevus was associated with a 4% reduction in the likelihood of invasive melanoma, independent of age and sex.

The other study included 566 newly diagnosed melanoma patients in two U.S. centers. Among the 56% of patients who were younger than 60 years, those who had more than 50 total nevi were 68% less likely to have a thick melanoma in a logistic regression analysis that controlled for demographic factors, as well as anatomic location of the melanoma, histologic subtype, and skin cancer screening frequency. In contrast, younger patients with more than 5 atypical nevi were 2.43-fold more likely to have thicker melanomas than were those with no such lesions. The lesson, according to the investigators, is that total nevus count isn’t a reliable determinant of a patient’s risk status or the need for skin examinations.

Dr. Ferris reported no financial conflicts of interest regarding her presentation.

Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same company.

The dramatic advances in targeted therapies for late-stage melanoma capture the headlines, but a recent Australian study quietly concluded that the most cost-effective way to lower both the incidence of melanoma and deaths caused by the malignancy over the long haul is through primary prevention in the form of daily sunscreen use, according to Laura Korb Ferris, MD, PhD, a dermatologist and director of clinical trials in the department of dermatology at the University of Pittsburgh.

Wavebreakmedia Ltd/Thinkstock

“I think it’s really important that we recognize the importance of preventing skin cancer, and not just early detection, not just treatment of late disease,” Dr. Ferris said at a virtual forum on cutaneous malignancies jointly presented by Postgraduate Institute for Medicine and Global Academy for Medical Education.

She highlighted the Australian cost-effectiveness analysis, which used Markov modeling of data from two published population-based, randomized controlled trials carried out in Queensland, Australia.

The cost-effectiveness study compared the estimated long-term impact of three different approaches to control of melanoma: a primary prevention strategy, which basically consisted of promoting daily sunscreen use and other forms of sun protection; early detection through annual whole-body skin examinations by physicians starting at age 50; and no intervention. The analysis provided estimates of the number of cases of melanoma, deaths caused by melanoma, nonmelanoma skin cancers, and quality of life outcomes over the course of 30 years starting in 50-year-old men and women.

Primary prevention through sun protection was the clear winner, as shown by the results:

  • A 44% reduction in the incidence of melanoma, compared with early detection via annual physician skin examinations.
  • A 39% reduction in projected melanoma deaths compared with early detection, which in turn achieved only a 2% reduction when compared with no intervention.
  • 27% fewer keratinocyte cancers excised than with annual skin examinations.
  • A 21.7% reduction in societal costs, compared with an early-detection program.

Daily sunscreen use for primary prevention was also associated with a modest 0.1% increase in quality-adjusted life-years. “Prevention is low cost, low risk, and effective,” Dr. Ferris observed.

The investigators noted that, while residents of the Australian state of Queensland are mainly fair-skinned and confront high UV radiation levels throughout the year, somewhat limiting the generalizability of the study findings, the relationships between the costs of interventional strategies and their outcomes should be proportional in other countries.

True enough, but a strategy of annual skin examinations starting at age 50 years as modeled in the Australian study is not the most productive way to conduct a melanoma early-detection program, Dr. Ferris said. She noted that data from the National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program show that the median age at diagnosis of melanoma in the United States is 65 years, while the median age at death caused by the malignancy is 71 years. That information is helpful in formulating strategies to improve early detection through more focused, higher-yield screening.

Dr. Laura Korb Ferris, department of dermatology, University of Pittsburgh
UPMC
Dr. Laura Korb Ferrish

Case in point: European investigators have estimated that, by screening everyone age 50 years and older, 475 people need to be screened and an average of 19.6 lesions must be biopsied in order to detect one melanoma. But by reserving screening for those age 50 years and up who have any one of three risk factors – a personal history of melanoma, atypical nevi, or at least 40 common nevi – those numbers drop dramatically: 98 people need to be screened and 13.5 lesions biopsied to detect one melanoma. And by further narrowing the screened population to those age 65 years or older with any of the three risk factors, 63 seniors would need to be screened and 9.2 lesions excised to find one melanoma.

Total-body skin examinations are time-consuming for dermatologists. In a recent U.S. study, investigators determined that the additional face-to-face time required per skin cancer detected by doing a total-body skin exam in adults who present to a dermatologist for another reason is 4.5 hours. And that’s just the time involved in detecting any type of skin cancer.

“To get that number for melanoma, multiply by 15 to 20,” Dr. Ferris said.

The investigators also determined that, for each decade of advancing age and increment in lighter skin phototype, the number-needed-to-examine in order to identify one skin cancer of any type decreased.



“By focusing on patients who are older and have fair skin types we can get that time down to about 1 hour,” commented Dr. Ferris, who penned an editorial perspective on the study.

While many dermatologists recommend that people with a high common nevus count undergo frequent screening for melanoma because they are at particularly high risk for invasive disease, a couple of recent studies challenge that notion, she pointed out. One was a retrospective study of 326 consecutive new melanoma patients which found that patients with a higher nevus count had thinner melanomas and a greater likelihood of in situ melanoma. Patients who presented with invasive melanoma had a mean total nevus count of 31.5 lesions, while those with in situ melanoma averaged 57.2 nevi. Each additional nevus was associated with a 4% reduction in the likelihood of invasive melanoma, independent of age and sex.

The other study included 566 newly diagnosed melanoma patients in two U.S. centers. Among the 56% of patients who were younger than 60 years, those who had more than 50 total nevi were 68% less likely to have a thick melanoma in a logistic regression analysis that controlled for demographic factors, as well as anatomic location of the melanoma, histologic subtype, and skin cancer screening frequency. In contrast, younger patients with more than 5 atypical nevi were 2.43-fold more likely to have thicker melanomas than were those with no such lesions. The lesson, according to the investigators, is that total nevus count isn’t a reliable determinant of a patient’s risk status or the need for skin examinations.

Dr. Ferris reported no financial conflicts of interest regarding her presentation.

Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same company.

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International expert group agrees on redefining psoriasis severity

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Tue, 02/07/2023 - 16:47

It’s high time to say farewell to the traditional categorization of psoriasis severity into mild, moderate, or severe disease, according to the International Psoriasis Council.

Dr. Bruce E. Strober

The mild/moderate/severe categorization is vague and defined differently by different organizations and in different countries. It often underestimates disease severity because it ignores psoriasis involvement in particularly tough-to-treat special areas, including the scalp, palms, soles, face, nails, and genitalia, Bruce E. Strober, MD, PhD, asserted at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year. He chaired an IPC project in which prominent psoriasis experts in 32 countries employed a Delphi consensus approach aimed at achieving agreement on a more practical recategorization of psoriasis severity for use in both daily clinical practice and enrolling appropriate participants in clinical trials. What emerged was a simplified dichotomous categorization system.

“What we came up with is a very sensible approach to defining whether patients should get either topical or systemic therapy. In fact, there are only two groups of patients in psoriasis: those who should get topicals alone, and those who should get systemic therapy. It’s topicals or systemics,” explained Dr. Strober, a dermatologist at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., who also works in private practice in Cromwell, Conn.

Under the IPC classification, psoriasis patients are candidates for systemic therapy if they meet at least one of three criteria: body surface area of involvement greater than 10%, disease involving the previously mentioned special areas, or failure of topical therapy.



“This approach is about practically treating patients who are in need,” Dr. Strober said. “If patients meet just one of these three criteria they can move on to our current toolbox of systemic therapies, be they older systemic treatments, apremilast, phototherapy, or 1 of the 11 biologics currently approved for the treatment of psoriasis. The key point is that for patients with moderate to severe psoriasis – or should I say, systemic therapy–appropriate psoriasis – treatment should be based on individual patient characteristics. We don’t work on a stepwise approach. If a patient walks in with more than 10% body surface area involved, don’t make them fail topicals; you can go right to systemics.”

European dermatologists often use the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score to characterize disease severity and monitor response to therapy. In contrast, American dermatologists generally find PASI too complex and time-consuming for use in clinical practice, relying instead on the amount of body surface area involved with psoriasis. Neither of these measures incorporates disease involvement in special areas, which when present ought to automatically place a patient in the systemic therapy–appropriate category, according to Dr. Strober.

“I find this [IPC recategorization] a very practical approach. I hope you write this down and use this in your own practice,” Dr. Strober said.

The full IPC report was published in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

The IPC psoriasis severity reclassification project was unfunded. Dr. Strober reported receiving institutional research funding from and serving as a paid consultant to more than two dozen pharmaceutical companies.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

bjancin@mdedge.com

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It’s high time to say farewell to the traditional categorization of psoriasis severity into mild, moderate, or severe disease, according to the International Psoriasis Council.

Dr. Bruce E. Strober

The mild/moderate/severe categorization is vague and defined differently by different organizations and in different countries. It often underestimates disease severity because it ignores psoriasis involvement in particularly tough-to-treat special areas, including the scalp, palms, soles, face, nails, and genitalia, Bruce E. Strober, MD, PhD, asserted at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year. He chaired an IPC project in which prominent psoriasis experts in 32 countries employed a Delphi consensus approach aimed at achieving agreement on a more practical recategorization of psoriasis severity for use in both daily clinical practice and enrolling appropriate participants in clinical trials. What emerged was a simplified dichotomous categorization system.

“What we came up with is a very sensible approach to defining whether patients should get either topical or systemic therapy. In fact, there are only two groups of patients in psoriasis: those who should get topicals alone, and those who should get systemic therapy. It’s topicals or systemics,” explained Dr. Strober, a dermatologist at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., who also works in private practice in Cromwell, Conn.

Under the IPC classification, psoriasis patients are candidates for systemic therapy if they meet at least one of three criteria: body surface area of involvement greater than 10%, disease involving the previously mentioned special areas, or failure of topical therapy.



“This approach is about practically treating patients who are in need,” Dr. Strober said. “If patients meet just one of these three criteria they can move on to our current toolbox of systemic therapies, be they older systemic treatments, apremilast, phototherapy, or 1 of the 11 biologics currently approved for the treatment of psoriasis. The key point is that for patients with moderate to severe psoriasis – or should I say, systemic therapy–appropriate psoriasis – treatment should be based on individual patient characteristics. We don’t work on a stepwise approach. If a patient walks in with more than 10% body surface area involved, don’t make them fail topicals; you can go right to systemics.”

European dermatologists often use the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score to characterize disease severity and monitor response to therapy. In contrast, American dermatologists generally find PASI too complex and time-consuming for use in clinical practice, relying instead on the amount of body surface area involved with psoriasis. Neither of these measures incorporates disease involvement in special areas, which when present ought to automatically place a patient in the systemic therapy–appropriate category, according to Dr. Strober.

“I find this [IPC recategorization] a very practical approach. I hope you write this down and use this in your own practice,” Dr. Strober said.

The full IPC report was published in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

The IPC psoriasis severity reclassification project was unfunded. Dr. Strober reported receiving institutional research funding from and serving as a paid consultant to more than two dozen pharmaceutical companies.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

bjancin@mdedge.com

It’s high time to say farewell to the traditional categorization of psoriasis severity into mild, moderate, or severe disease, according to the International Psoriasis Council.

Dr. Bruce E. Strober

The mild/moderate/severe categorization is vague and defined differently by different organizations and in different countries. It often underestimates disease severity because it ignores psoriasis involvement in particularly tough-to-treat special areas, including the scalp, palms, soles, face, nails, and genitalia, Bruce E. Strober, MD, PhD, asserted at MedscapeLive’s annual Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar, held virtually this year. He chaired an IPC project in which prominent psoriasis experts in 32 countries employed a Delphi consensus approach aimed at achieving agreement on a more practical recategorization of psoriasis severity for use in both daily clinical practice and enrolling appropriate participants in clinical trials. What emerged was a simplified dichotomous categorization system.

“What we came up with is a very sensible approach to defining whether patients should get either topical or systemic therapy. In fact, there are only two groups of patients in psoriasis: those who should get topicals alone, and those who should get systemic therapy. It’s topicals or systemics,” explained Dr. Strober, a dermatologist at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., who also works in private practice in Cromwell, Conn.

Under the IPC classification, psoriasis patients are candidates for systemic therapy if they meet at least one of three criteria: body surface area of involvement greater than 10%, disease involving the previously mentioned special areas, or failure of topical therapy.



“This approach is about practically treating patients who are in need,” Dr. Strober said. “If patients meet just one of these three criteria they can move on to our current toolbox of systemic therapies, be they older systemic treatments, apremilast, phototherapy, or 1 of the 11 biologics currently approved for the treatment of psoriasis. The key point is that for patients with moderate to severe psoriasis – or should I say, systemic therapy–appropriate psoriasis – treatment should be based on individual patient characteristics. We don’t work on a stepwise approach. If a patient walks in with more than 10% body surface area involved, don’t make them fail topicals; you can go right to systemics.”

European dermatologists often use the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score to characterize disease severity and monitor response to therapy. In contrast, American dermatologists generally find PASI too complex and time-consuming for use in clinical practice, relying instead on the amount of body surface area involved with psoriasis. Neither of these measures incorporates disease involvement in special areas, which when present ought to automatically place a patient in the systemic therapy–appropriate category, according to Dr. Strober.

“I find this [IPC recategorization] a very practical approach. I hope you write this down and use this in your own practice,” Dr. Strober said.

The full IPC report was published in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

The IPC psoriasis severity reclassification project was unfunded. Dr. Strober reported receiving institutional research funding from and serving as a paid consultant to more than two dozen pharmaceutical companies.

MedscapeLive and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

bjancin@mdedge.com

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