Topical Steroid Withdrawal is a Targetable Excess of Mitochondrial NAD+

Author:

Shobnam Nadia,Saksena Sarini,Ratley Grace,Yadav Manoj,Chaudhary Prem Prashant,Sun Ashleigh A,Howe Katherine N,Gadkari Manasi,Franco Luis M,Ganesan Sundar,McCann Katelyn J,Hsu Amy P,Kanakabandi Kishore,Ricklefs Stacy,Lack Justin,Yu Weiming,Similuk Morgan,Walkiewicz Magdalena A, ,Gardner Donna D,Barta Kelly,Tullos Kathryn,Myles Ian A

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundTopical corticosteroids (TCS) are first-line therapies for numerous skin conditions. Topical Steroid Withdrawal (TSW) is a controversial diagnosis advocated by patients with prolonged TCS exposure who report severe systemic reactions upon treatment cessation. However, to date there have been no systematic clinical or mechanistic studies to distinguish TSW from other eczematous disorders.MethodsA re-analysis of a previous survey with eczematous skin disease was performed to evaluate potential TSW distinguishing symptoms. We subsequently conducted a pilot study of 16 patients fitting the proposed diagnostic criteria. We then performed: tissue metabolomics, transcriptomics, and immunostaining on skin biopsies; serum metabolomics and cytokine assessments; shotgun metagenomics on microbiome skin swabs; genome sequencing; followed by functional, mechanistic studies using human skin cell lines and mice.ResultsClinically distinct TSW symptoms included burning, flushing, and thermodysregulation. Metabolomics and transcriptomics both implicated elevated NAD+ oxidation stemming from increased expression of mitochondrial complex I and conversion of tryptophan into kynurenine metabolites. These abnormalities were induced by glucocorticoid exposure bothin vitroand in a cohort of healthy controls (N=19) exposed to TCS. Targeting complex I via either metformin or the herbal compound berberine improved outcomes in both cell culture and in an open-label case series for patients with TSW.ConclusionTaken together, our results suggest that TSW has a distinct dermatopathology. While future studies are needed to validate these results in larger cohorts, this work provides the first mechanistic evaluation into TSW pathology, and offers insights into clinical identification, pharmacogenomic candidates, and directed therapeutic strategies.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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