Atopic Dermatitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Identification of Epidermal Signatures in Patients With Atopic Dermatitis
Atopic dermatitis is a skin disorder with an itchy, red skin rash. This may be because
certain proteins are increased in the skin of AD patients. The increased expression of these
proteins play an important role in the development of AD and may increase the risk for
persons with AD to get skin infections and allergies.
There are very few non-invasive ways to diagnose and monitor the development and progression
of atopic dermatitis. The goal of this study is to develop laboratory tests, done on skin
samples collected by tapy stripping, that can be used for early detection and monitoring the
response to treatment for a variety of skin diseases, including atopic dermatitis.
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a highly pruritic, chronic inflammatory skin disease that affects
up to 25% of children and 10% of adults. Atopic skin disease is associated with significant
morbidity as well as physical, psychological, and economical quality-of-life impairment. The
economical impact of AD and the requirement for family support can be extraordinary and may
be greater than what is typically found for asthma and type I diabetes, respectively. In many
patients, the early onset of AD is the first clinical manifestation of allergic disease and
often triggers the atopic march, the subsequent development of food allergy, allergic
rhinitis, and asthma. The skin of AD patients is characterized by an increased Th2 axis,
cellular infiltration and significant epithelial inflammation. These factors permit increased
penetration of invading allergens and pathogens that further drive AD pathogenesis and
pruritus (itch). Approximately 90% of AD patients are colonized with S. aureus, while only 5
- 30% of non-atopic individuals are colonized. Novel therapeutic approaches are currently in
clinical trials which provide the opportunity to target pathways integral to AD disease
pathogenesis. In recent years, it has been shown that AD is more heterogeneous than initially
perceived. Since novel therapeutics target different pathways, one therapeutic approach may
not work for all AD patients and each therapy may provide a different level of clinical
benefit. Additionally, since AD manifests primarily in the skin, blood collection and
analysis may not be the most indicative measurement to determine which therapy is best for
each patient. Despite improved understanding of AD, validated methods to non-invasively
diagnose and monitor the development or progression of AD are sorely lacking. Additionally, a
non-invasive method is needed to understand inflammation at the site of disease manifestation
and potentially identify which biological pathways are most relevant for a given patient.
This will allow a more personalized approach to treatment of patients with AD.
The investigator has hypothesized that skin proteins are differentially expressed in the
upper layers of disease versus non-disease skin tissue and that these may be used as
biomarkers for skin changes linked to the development of AD. Previously a method for
comparing expression of skin proteins by extracting proteins from tape strips and evaluating
differences using mass spectrometry-based proteomics was developed. This non-invasive method
is suitable for use in all AD patients and has been used to show an increase in specific skin
proteins in AD patients versus normal controls. Despite this success, additional studies are
needed to compare gene and protein expression obtained from tape strips with genomic and
proteomic profiles from full thickness skin and whole blood. This proposed study will
determine the validity of using non-invasive tape stripping, as a surrogate for skin biopsy
and whole blood collection, to identify the inflammatory pathway most up-regulated in a given
AD patient. This information will be used in defining biomarkers that will facilitate
personalized medicine approaches using emerging novel therapeutics.
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