Psoriasis Flashcards
1
Q
Epidemiology of psoriasis
A
- Affects 2% of the population (150,000 new cases/yr)
- Average age of onset is 29 years in males and 27 years in females (equal prevalence in men vs women)
- There is some genetic predisposition (higher rates of concordance among monozygotic twins), 30-50% cases have family Hx
- Is a heritable disease with a multi-locus model of inheritance and environmental factors
- Disequilibrium of certain HLA genes
2
Q
Clinical features
A
- Psoriasis vulgaris (most common) consists of circular plaques of erythema and scaling, predominantly on the knees and elbows, scalp and nails
- Other areas affected: natal cleft, umbilicus, axilla, groin, genetalia
- There may be separation of the nail plate from the nail bed (onycholysis) and nail pitting (very characteristic)
- Guttate psoriasis (drops) is erythematous and scaly, often confined to the trunk and proximal extremities (possibly related to strep throat)
- Psoriatic erythroderma involves the entire body and involves generalized erythema and varying degree of scaling
3
Q
Pustular psoriasis
A
- Sterile pustules on a background of erythema and scaling
- Usually generalized form but can also be confined to the palms and soles
4
Q
Psoriatic arthropathy
A
- 5 patterns are typically seen, only recognized non-cutaneous manifestation
- asymmetric oligo-arthritis
- symmetric poly-arthritis
- distal interphalangeal joint disease
- a form of ankylosing spondylitis
- arthritis mutilans
5
Q
Other complications of psoriasis
A
- Severe psoriasis sufferers have a 54% higher chance to have a stroke
- 21% higher chance of a heart attack
- and 53% more likely to die over a 10 yr period
6
Q
Etiology of psoriasis
A
- Due to increased proliferation of keratinocytes in conjunction with sustained and characteristic inflammatory response (TH1T cell mediated)
- Keratinocyte life cycle is greatly shortened
- There are high numbers of activated T cells within psoriatic lesions
- Endothelial cells and keratinocytes express immune-dependent adhesion molecules (ICAM and E-selectin), due to IL1 and TNF-a
- increase in langerhans and macrophages abundance
- Decrease in TH2 T cells abundance
7
Q
Pathogenesis
A
- Psoriatic lesions contain activated T cells (TH1 and CD8), macrophages, and PMNs
- Many T cells become memory cells (both CD4 and CD8), expressing CD45RO (memory surface marker)
- Migrating T cells also express skin homing markers (CD45RO, lack of CCR7 marker), leading to increased T cells in the skin
- CD4s mostly present in deeper dermis, CD8s mostly present in epidermo-dermal junction
- Activated CD4s releases IL12 and TNF-a
8
Q
Rx of psoriasis: Alefacept
A
- Fusion protein of LFA-3 (lymphocyte function antigen-3) linked to Fc fragment of human IgG
- LFA-3 is expressed on the surface of APCs (langerhans cells) and binds to CD2 on the T cell surface
- This drug competitively binds to the CD2 receptor of the T cell to prevent co-stimulation and activation of the T cells
- When the protein is bound to CD2, the Fc region binds to NK cells Fc receptor, causing the NK cell to kill the T cell
9
Q
Rx of psoriasis: Inflixamab, adalimumab, etanercerpt
A
- All are chimeric protein (fusion protein) of an Ab who’s binding region is engineered to bind to TNF-a
- These Abs bind both soluble and receptor-bound TNF-a, thus inhibit its ability to induce an up-regulation of ICAM and E-selectin in endothelial and keratinocytes
- Also prevents T cell reactivation
10
Q
Rx of psoriasis: Ustekinumab
A
- Ab that binds to IL-12 and IL-23 and inhibits their activity
- These IL’s normally stimulate T-cells growth and function
- Thus the drug blocks this stimulation and reduces inflammation