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Sanchez, Gina A. Montealegre; Reinhardt, Adam; Ramsey, Suzanne; Wittkowski, Helmut; Hashkes, Philip J.; Berkun, Yackov; Schalm, Susanne; Murias, Sara; Dare, Jason A.; Brown, Diane; Stone, Deborah L.; Gao, Ling; Klausmeier, Thomas; Foell, Dirk; De Jesus, Adriana A.; Chapelle, Dawn C.; Kim, Hanna; Dill, Samantha; Colbert, Robert A.; Failla, Laura; Kost, Bahar; O'Brien, Michelle; Reynolds, James C.; Folio, Les R.; Calvo, Katherine R.; Paul, Scott M.; Weir, Nargues; Brofferio, Alessandra; Soldatos, Ariane; Biancotto, Angelique; Cowen, Edward W.; Digiovanna, John J.; Gadina, Massimo; Lipton, Andrew J.; Hadigan, Colleen; Holland, Steven M.; Fontana, Joseph; Alawad, Ahmad S.; Brown, Rebecca J.; Rother, Kristina I.; Heller, Theo; Brooks, Kristina M.; Kumar, Parag; Brooks, Stephen R.; Waldman, Meryl; Singh, Harsharan K.; Nickeleit, Volker; Silk, Maria; Prakash, Apurva; Janes, Jonathan M.; Ozen, Seza; Wakim, Paul G.; Brogan, Paul A.; Macias, William L. und Goldbach-Mansky, Raphaela (2018): JAK1/2 inhibition with baricitinib in the treatment of autoinflammatory interferonopathies. In: Journal of Clinical Investigation, Bd. 128, Nr. 7: S. 3041-3052 [PDF, 7MB]

Abstract

BACKGROUND. Monogenic IFN-mediated autoinflammatory diseases present in infancy with systemic inflammation, an IFN response gene signature, inflammatory organ damage, and high mortality. We used the JAK inhibitor baricitinib, with IFN-blocking activity in vitro, to ameliorate disease. METHODS. Between October 2011 and February 2017, 10 patients with CANDLE (chronic atypical neutrophilic dermatosis with lipodystrophy and elevated temperatures), 4 patients with SAVI (stimulator of IFN genes-associated [STING-associated] vasculopathy with onset in infancy), and 4 patients with other interferonopathies were enrolled in an expanded access program. The patients underwent dose escalation, and the benefit was assessed by reductions in daily disease symptoms and corticosteroid requirement. Quality of life, organ inflammation, changes in IFN-induced biomarkers, and safety were longitudinally assessed. RESULTS. Eighteen patients were treated for a mean duration of 3.0 years (1.5-4.9 years). The median daily symptom score decreased from 1.3 (interquartile range [IQR], 0.93-1.78) to 0.25 (IQR, 0.1-0.63) (P < 0.0001). In 14 patients receiving corticosteroids at baseline, daily prednisone doses decreased from 0.44 mg/kg/day (IQR, 0.31-1.09) to 0.11 mg/kg/day (IQR, 0.02-0.24) (P < 0.01), and 5 of 10 patients with CANDLE achieved lasting clinical remission. The patients' quality of life and height and bone mineral density Z-scores significantly improved, and their IFN biomarkers decreased. Three patients, two of whom had genetically undefined conditions, discontinued treatment because of lack of efficacy, and one CANDLE patient discontinued treatment because of BK viremia and azotemia. The most common adverse events were upper respiratory infections, gastroenteritis, and BK viruria and viremia. CONCLUSION. Upon baricitinib treatment, clinical manifestations and inflammatory and IFN biomarkers improved in patients with the monogenic interferonopathies CANDLE, SAVI, and other interferonopathies. Monitoring safety and efficacy is important in benefit-risk assessment.

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