Response to anti-IL17 therapy in inflammatory disease is not strongly impacted by genetic background

Response to the anti-IL17 monoclonal antibody secukinumab is heterogeneous, and not all participants respond to treatment. Understanding whether this heterogeneity is driven by genetic variation is a key aim of pharmacogenetics and could influence precision medicine approaches in inflammatory diseas...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhang, K, Shestopaloff, K, Hollis, B, Kwok, C, Hon, C, Hartmann, N, Tian, C, Wozniak, M, Santos, L, West, D, Gardiner, S, Mallon, A-M, Readie, A, Martin, R, Nichols, T, Beste, M, Zierer, J, Ferrero, E, Vandemeulebroecke, M, Jostins-Dean, L
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Cell Press 2023
Description
Summary:Response to the anti-IL17 monoclonal antibody secukinumab is heterogeneous, and not all participants respond to treatment. Understanding whether this heterogeneity is driven by genetic variation is a key aim of pharmacogenetics and could influence precision medicine approaches in inflammatory diseases. Using changes in disease activity scores across 5,218 genotyped individuals from 19 clinical trials across four indications (psoriatic arthritis, psoriasis, ankylosing spondylitis, and rheumatoid arthritis), we tested whether genetics predicted response to secukinumab. We did not find any evidence of association between treatment response and common variants, imputed HLA alleles, polygenic risk scores of disease susceptibility, or cross-disease components of shared genetic risk. This suggests that anti-IL17 therapy is equally effective regardless of an individual’s genetic background, a finding that has important implications for future genetic studies of biological therapy response in inflammatory diseases.