International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Oct 2020)

Biological and Clinical Changes in a Pediatric Series Treated with Off-Label JAK Inhibitors

  • Alessia Pin,
  • Alessandra Tesser,
  • Serena Pastore,
  • Valentina Moressa,
  • Erica Valencic,
  • Anna Arbo,
  • Alessandra Maestro,
  • Alberto Tommasini,
  • Andrea Taddio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21207767
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 20
p. 7767

Abstract

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Off-label use of medications is still a common practice in pediatric rheumatology. JAK inhibitors are authorized in adults in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis and ulcerative colitis. Although their use is not authorized yet in children, JAK inhibitors, based on their mechanism of action and on clinical experiences in small series, have been suggested to be useful in the treatment of pediatric interferon-mediated inflammation. Accordingly, an increased interferon score may help to identify those patients who might benefit of JAK inhibitors. We describe the clinical experience with JAK inhibitors in seven children affected with severe inflammatory conditions and we discuss the correlation between clinical features and transcriptomic data. Clinical improvements were recorded in all cases. A reduction of interferon signaling was recorded in three out of seven subjects at last follow-up, irrespectively from clinical improvements. Other signal pathways with significant differences between patients and controls included upregulation of DNA repair pathway and downregulation of extracellular collagen homeostasis. Two patients developed drug-related adverse events, which were considered serious in one case. In conclusion, JAK inhibitors may offer a valuable option for children with severe interferon-mediated inflammatory disorders reducing the interferon score as well as influencing other signal pathways that deserve future studies.

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