154 research outputs found

    Rapid and Sustained Effect of Dupilumab on Work Productivity in Patients with Difficult-to-treat Atopic Dermatitis:Results from the Dutch BioDay Registry

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    Dupilumab treatment improves signs, symptoms, and quality of life in patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis. This study evaluated the impact of dupilumab treatment on absenteeism, presenteeism, and related costs in a large multi-centre cohort of adult patients with difficult-to-treat atopic dermatitis in daily practice. Patients treated with dupilumab participating in the Dutch BioDay Registry reporting employment were included. Absenteeism, presenteeism, and related costs at baseline and during follow-up were calculated using the Work Productivity and Activity Impairment questionnaire. A total of 218 adult patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis were included. Total work impairment reduced significantly from baseline (35.5%) to week 52 (11.5%), pā€‰&lt;ā€‰0.001. Median weekly productivity losses reduced significantly from baseline (ā‚¬379.8 (140.7-780.8)) to week 52 (ā‚¬0.0 (0.0-211.0), pā€‰&lt;ā€‰0.001). In this study, dupilumab treatment demonstrated a significant improvement in work productivity and reduction in associated costs in a large cohort of patients with difficult-to-treat atopic dermatitis in daily practice.</p

    Faeces as a novel material to estimate lyssavirus prevalence in bat populations

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    Rabies is caused by infection with a lyssavirus. Bat rabies is of concern for both public health and bat conservation. The current method for lyssavirus prevalence studies in bat populations is by oral swabbing, which is invasive for the bats, dangerous for handlers, time-consuming and expensive. In many situations, such sampling is not feasible, and hence, our understanding of epidemiology of bat rabies is limited. Faeces are usually easy to collect from bat colonies without disturbing the bats and thus could be a practical and feasible material for lyssavirus prevalence studies. To further explore this idea, we performed virological analysis on faecal pellets and oral swabs of seven serotine bats (Eptesicus serotinus) that were positive for European bat 1 lyssavirus in the brain. We also performed immunohistochemical and virological analyses on digestive tract samples of these bats to determine potential sources of lyssavirus in the faeces. We found that lyssavirus detection by RT-qPCR was nearly as sensitive in faecal pellets (6/7 bats positive, 86%) as in oral swabs (7/7 bats positive, 100%). The likely source of lyssavirus in the faeces was virus excreted into the oral cavity from the salivary glands (5/6 bats positive by immunohistochemistry and RT-qPCR) or tongue (3/4 bats positive by immunohistochemistry) and swallowed with saliva. Virus could not be isolated from any of the seven faecal pellets, suggesting the lyssavirus detected in faeces is not infectious. Lyssavirus detection in the majority of faecal pellets of infected bats shows that this novel material should be further explored for lyssavirus prevalence studies in bats

    Early and Long-Term Effects of Dupilumab Treatment on Circulating T-Cell Functions inĀ Patients with Moderate-to-Severe Atopic Dermatitis

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    Dupilumab, a mAb targeting IL-4 receptor alpha (IL-4RĪ±), markedly improves disease severity in patients with atopic dermatitis. However, the effect of IL-4RĪ± blockade on dynamics of circulating skin-homing T cells, which are crucial players in the pathologic mechanism of atopic dermatitis, has not been studied yet. In addition, it remains unknown whether dupilumab treatment induces long-lasting T- and B-cell polarization. Therefore, we studied the short- and long-term effects of dupilumab treatment on IL-4RĪ± expression and T-cell cytokine production within total and skin-homing (cutaneous lymphocyte antigen+/CCR4+) subpopulations in patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis. Dupilumab treatment completely blocked IL-4RĪ± expression and signal transducer and activator of transcription 6 phosphorylation in CD19+ B cells and CD4+ T cells within 2 hours of administration and through week 52. Although no change in the proportion of skin-homing T-cell subsets was found, dupilumab treatment significantly decreased the percentage of proliferating (Ki67+) and T helper type 2 and T helper type 22 cytokine-producing skin-homing CD4+ T cells at week 4. No evidence of general T helper type cell skewing following a year of dupilumab treatment was found. In summary, dupilumab treatment rapidly and stably inhibited IL-4RĪ±, which was accompanied by a strong early functional immunological effect specifically on skin-homing T cells without affecting overall T helper type cell skewing in the long term

    Dupilumab is very effective in a large cohort of difficult-to-treat adult atopic dermatitis patients:First clinical and biomarker results from the BioDay registry

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    Introduction: Dupilumab has recently been approved for the treatment of moderate to severe atopic dermatitis (AD) in adults. Daily practice data on dupilumab treatment are scarce. Objective: To study the effect of 16-week treatment with dupilumab on clinical response and serum biomarkers in adult patients with moderate-severe AD in daily practice. Methods: Data were extracted from the BioDay registry, a prospective multicenter registry. Sixteen-week clinical effectiveness of dupilumab was expressed as number of patients achieving EASI-50 (Eczema Area and Severity Index) or EASI-75, as well as patient-reported outcomes measures (Patient-Oriented Eczema Measure, Dermatology Life Quality Index, Numeric Rating Scale pruritus). Twenty-one biomarkers were measured in patients treated with dupilumab without concomitant use of oral immunosuppressive drugs at five different time points (baseline, 4, 8, 12, and 16Ā weeks). Results: In total, 138 patients treated with dupilumab in daily practice were included. This cohort consisted of patients with very difficult-to-treat AD, including 84 (61%) patients who failed treatment on ā‰„2 immunosuppressive drugs. At week 16, the mean percent change in EASI score was 73%. The EASI-50 and EASI-75 were achieved by 114 (86%) and 82 (62%) patients after 16Ā weeks of treatment. The most reported side effect was conjunctivitis, occurring in 47 (34%) patients. During dupilumab treatment, disease severity-related serum biomarkers (TARC, PARC, periostin, and IL-22), eotaxin-1, and eotaxin-3 significantly decreased. Conclusion: Treatment with dupilumab significantly improved disease severity and decreased severity-related serum biomarkers in patients with very difficult-to-treat AD in a daily practice setting

    Dupilumab shows long-term effectiveness in a large cohort of treatment-refractory atopic dermatitis patients in daily practice:52-Week results from the Dutch BioDay registry

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    Background Real-life data on long-term effectiveness and safety of dupilumab in atopic dermatitis patients are limited. Objective To study 52-week effectiveness and safety of dupilumab in a prospective multicenter cohort of adult patients with treatment-refractory atopic dermatitis. Methods Patients treated with dupilumab and participating in the Dutch BioDay registry were included. Clinical effectiveness and safety were evaluated. Results Two hundred ten atopic dermatitis patients were included. Mean percentage change in Eczema Area and Severity Index score after 16 weeks was ā€“70.0% (standard deviation 33.2%) and further decreased to ā€“76.6% (standard deviation 30.6%) by week 52. A greater than or equal to 75% improvement in the score was achieved by 59.9% of individuals by week 16 and by 70.3% by week 52. The most reported adverse effect was conjunctivitis (34%). Limited patients (17; 8.1%) discontinued dupilumab treatment. Limitations Because of the lack of a control group and observational design, factors of bias may have been induced. Conclusion Treatment with dupilumab resulted in a rapid improvement in clinical outcome measures, and effectiveness further improved during the 52-week follow-up period

    Unraveling heterogeneity in pediatric atopic dermatitis: identification of serum biomarker based patient clusters

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    BACKGROUND: Increasing evidence shows that pediatric atopic dermatitis (AD) differs from adult AD on a biologic level. Broad biomarker profiling across a wide range of ages of pediatric patients with AD is lacking. OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to identify serum biomarker profiles in children with AD aged 0 to 17 years and compare these profiles with those previously found in adults with AD. METHODS: Luminex multiplex immunoassays were used to measure 145 biomarkers in serum from 240 children with AD (aged 0-17 years). Principal components analysis followed by unsupervised k-means clustering were performed to identify patient clusters. Patients were stratified into age groups (0-4 years, 5-11 years, and 12-17 years) to assess association between age and cluster membership. RESULTS: Children aged 0 to 4 years had the highest levels of T H1 cell-skewing markers and lowest levels of T H17 cell-related markers. T H2 cell-related markers did not differ significantly between age groups. Similar to the pattern in adults, cluster analysis identified 4 distinct pediatric patient clusters (T H2 cell/retinol-dominant, skin-homing-dominant, T H1 cell/T H2 cell/T H17 cell/IL-1-dominant, and T H1 cell/IL-1/eosinophil-inferior clusters). Only the T H1 cell/T H2 cell/T H17 cell/IL-1-dominant cluster resembled 1 of the previously identified adult clusters. Although no association with age or age of onset seemed to be found, disease severity was significantly associated with the skin-homing-dominant cluster. CONCLUSION: Four distinct patient clusters based on serum biomarker profiles could be identified in a large cohort of pediatric patients with AD, of which 1 was similar to previously identified adult clusters. The identification of endotypes driven by distinct underlying immunopathologic pathways might be useful to define pediatric patients with AD who are at risk of persistent disease and may necessitate different targeted treatment approaches

    Identification of Risk Factors for Dupilumab-associated OculaSurface Disease in Patients with Atopic Dermatitis

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    This study identified risk factors for the development of dupilumab-associated ocular surface disease in patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis in a large prospective daily practice cohort. Data from the Dutch BioDay Registry were used to assess the risk of developing dupilumab-associated ocular surface di-sease, by performing univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses. A total of 469 patients were included, of which 152/469 (32.4%) developed dupi-lumab-associated ocular surface disease. Multivariate analysis showed a statistically significant association of the development of dupilumab-associated ocular surface disease with a history of any eye disease (his-tory of self-reported episodic acute allergic conjunctivitis excluded) combined with the use of ophthalmic medication at the start of dupilumab (odds ratio 5.16, 95% confidence interval 2.30ā€“11.56, p < 0.001). In conclusion, a history of any eye disease (history of self-reported episodic acute allergic conjunctivitis ex-cluded) combined with the use of ophthalmic medication at baseline was associated with the development of dupilumab-associated ocular surface disease in patients with atopic dermatitis
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