Abstract
AbstractSarcoidosis is an idiopathic inflammatory disorder that is commonly treated with glucocorticoids and there are no approved steroid-sparing medications. There is emerging evidence that Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors, which inhibit JAK-dependent cytokine activity, may hold promise in sarcoidosis. In this open-label trial, 10 patients with recalcitrant sarcoidosis with cutaneous involvement were treated with tofacitinib 5 mg twice daily. There was no washout period and patients were permitted to continue, taper, or discontinue other treatments. The primary outcome was the change in the Cutaneous Sarcoidosis Activity and Morphology Instrument (CSAMI) activity score after 6 months. Change in internal organ disease activity was also assessed using total lesion glycolysis (TLG) determined by full-body positron emission tomography. A mean reduction in the CSAMI activity score of 82.7% was observed, with 6 patients showing a complete response. Internal organ response data was available in 8 patients; a decrease in TLG of ≥50% was noted in 5 patients, with complete or near complete resolution in 3 (>98% reduction in TLG). Patients were generally able to significantly taper or discontinue their baseline immunosuppressive regimen, which included prednisone in 5 patients. Single cell RNA-sequencing, bulk RNA-sequencing, and high-throughput proteomic analyses were performed on skin and blood as a function of treatment in order to delineate changes in immunologic signals with therapy. We identified CD4+ T cell derived IFN-γ as a central cytokine driver of sarcoidosis and inhibition of its activity was achieved with tofacitinib and correlated closely with clinical improvement. Tofacitinib appears to have impressive activity in treatment of sarcoidosis and likely acts by inhibiting IFN-γ, larger, controlled studies are warranted.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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