Scientific Reports (Apr 2024)

Comprehensive plasma cytokine and chemokine profiling in prurigo nodularis reveals endotypes in Type 2 inflammation

  • Hannah L. Cornman,
  • Jaya Manjunath,
  • Sriya V. Reddy,
  • Jackson Adams,
  • Ahmad Rajeh,
  • Christeen Samuel,
  • Aaron Bao,
  • Ryan Zhao,
  • Emily Z. Ma,
  • Jason Shumsky,
  • Thomas W. Pritchard,
  • Brenda Umenita Imo,
  • Alexander L. Kollhoff,
  • Kevin K. Lee,
  • Weiying Lu,
  • Selina Yossef,
  • Madan M. Kwatra,
  • Shawn G. Kwatra

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-58013-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Prurigo nodularis (PN) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease that is associated with variability in peripheral blood eosinophil levels and response to T-helper 2 targeted therapies (Th2). Our objective was to determine whether circulating immune profiles with respect to type 2 inflammation differ by race and peripheral blood eosinophil count. Plasma from 56 PN patients and 13 matched healthy controls was assayed for 54 inflammatory biomarkers. We compared biomarker levels between PN and HCs, among PN patients based on absolute eosinophil count, and across racial groups in PN. Eleven biomarkers were elevated in PN versus HCs including interleukin (IL)-12/IL-23p40, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), Thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP), and macrophage-derived chemokine (MDC/CCL22). Additionally, PN patients with AEC > 0.3 K cells/μL had higher Th2 markers (eotaxin, eotaxin-3, TSLP, MCP-4/CCL13), and African American PN patients had lower eosinophils, eotaxin, and eotaxin-3 versus Caucasian and Asian PN patients (p 0.3 K and Asian and Caucasian races are associated with Th2 skewed circulating immune profiles and response to Th2 targeted therapies.