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Efficacy and Safety of Secukinumab for the Treatment of Severe ABCA12 Deficiency-Related Ichthyosis in a Child

J. Yogarajah, Christopher J. Gouveia, Joseena Iype, Simon Häfliger, André Schaller, Jean‐Marc Nuoffer, Michaela Fux, Matthias Gautschi

2021Skin Health and Disease46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Patients with severe autosomal recessive congenital ichthyosis (ARCI) show a T helper 17/interleukin 17 (Th17/IL17) skewing in their skin and serum, resembling the inflammatory profile of psoriatic patients. Secukinumab, an IL-17A inhibitor, has shown clinical efficacy in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis. Aims: To test the clinical efficacy and safety of secukinumab in a paediatric patient with ATP-binding cassette subfamily A member 12 deficiency-related severe erythrodermic ARCI. Materials & Methods: 6-months therapeutic trial. During the first 4-weeks induction period, the patient received weekly subcutaneous injections of 150 mg secukinumab (five injections in total). During the following 20-weeks maintenance period, the patient was given a subcutaneous injection of 150 mg secukinumab every 4 weeks. Result & Discussion: After the 6-months therapy period, there was a 48% reduction from the baseline Ichthyosis-Area-Severity-Index (-Erythema/-Scaling) score. The treatment was well tolerated. Moreover, cytokine analysis revealed a reduction of keratinocyte-derived proinflammatory cytokines and an abrogation of Th17-skewing during therapy. Conclusion: Further studies are needed to evaluate the effects of the use of IL-17A inhibition in ARCI patients.

Topics & Concepts

SecukinumabMedicineErythemaDermatologyIchthyosisInterleukin 17Proinflammatory cytokinePsoriasisCytokineSurgeryInternal medicinePsoriatic arthritisInflammationSkin and Cellular Biology ResearchDermatological and Skeletal DisordersPsoriasis: Treatment and Pathogenesis
Efficacy and Safety of Secukinumab for the Treatment of Severe ABCA12 Deficiency-Related Ichthyosis in a Child | Litcius