Psoriasis as a model for T-cell-mediated disease: immunobiologic and clinical effects of treatment with multiple doses of efalizumab, an anti-CD11a antibody. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: Leukocyte function-associated antigen 1 (LFA-1), consisting of CD11a and CD18 subunits, plays an important role in T-cell activation and leukocyte extravasation. OBJECTIVE: To test whether blocking CD11a decreases immunobiologic and clinical activity in psoriatic plaques. DESIGN: Open-label, multicenter, dose escalation study. PATIENTS: Thirty-nine patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis. INTERVENTION: Intravenous infusions of efalizumab, a humanized anti-CD11a monoclonal antibody, for 7 weeks at doses of 0.1 mg/kg every other week or 0.1 mg/kg weekly (category 1), 0.3 mg/kg weekly (category 2), and 0.3 increasing to 0.6 or 1.0 mg/kg weekly (category 3). Skin biopsies were performed on days 0, 28, and 56. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Serum efalizumab levels, levels of total and unoccupied T-cell CD11a, T cell counts, epidermal thickness, cutaneous intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) and keratin 16 (K16) expression, Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) scores. RESULTS: Dose-response relationships were observed for pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamic measures. Category 1 failed to maintain detectable serum efalizumab or T cell CD11a down-modulation between doses. Category 2 achieved both. Category 3 achieved both and additionally maintained sustained T-cell CD11a saturation between doses. A dose-response relationship was also observed clinically and histologically. The mean decrease in the PASI score was 47% in category 3, 45% in category 2, and 10% in category 1 (P<.001). Epidermal and dermal T-cell counts, epidermal thickness, and ICAM-1 and K16 expression decreased in categories 2 and 3 but not in category 1. Circulating lymphocyte counts increased in categories 2 and 3. CONCLUSIONS: At doses of 0.3 mg/kg or more per week, intravenous efalizumab produced significant clinical and histologic improvement in psoriasis, which correlated with sustained serum efalizumab levels and T-cell CD11a saturation and down-modulation.

publication date

  • May 1, 2002

Research

keywords

  • Antibodies, Monoclonal
  • CD11 Antigens
  • Psoriasis

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0036578664

PubMed ID

  • 12020219

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 138

issue

  • 5