Publications

Publications, Books, Book Chapters and Reviews by Prof. Marcus Maurer, MD

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Omalizumab normalizes the gene expression signature of lesional skin in patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria: A randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled study

Filename 339. Metz et al., Oma normalizes gene expr., Allergy 2019.pdf
Filesize 978.71 KB
Version o.339
Date added June 9, 2020
Downloaded 2 times
Category Original Work
Tags chronic spontaneous urticaria, omalizumab
Authors Metz, M., Torene, R., Kaiser, S., Beste, M. T., Staubach, P., Bauer, A., Brehler, R., Gericke, J., Letzkus, M., Hartmann, N., Erpenbeck, V. J., and Maurer, M.
Citation Metz, M., Torene, R., Kaiser, S., Beste, M. T., Staubach, P., Bauer, A., Brehler, R., Gericke, J., Letzkus, M., Hartmann, N., Erpenbeck, V. J., and Maurer, M.: Omalizumab normalizes the gene expression signature of lesional skin in patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Allergy 2019: 74; 141-151.
Corresponding authors Maurer, M.
DocNum O.339
DocType PDF
Edition; Page 74; 141-151
IF TBD (IF 2018: 6.77)
Publisher Allergy
ReleaseDate 2019

Background: Omalizumab, a humanized recombinant monoclonal anti‐IgE antibody, proved to be effective in patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU), including severe and treatment‐refractory CSU. Here, we report omalizumab’s effect on gene expression in skin biopsies from CSU patients enrolled in a double‐blind, placebo‐controlled study.

Methods: Chronic spontaneous urticaria patients (18‐75 years) were randomized to either 300 mg omalizumab (n = 20) or placebo (n = 10) administered s.c. every 4 weeks for 12 weeks (NCT01599637). Lesional and nonlesional skin biopsies were collected from the same area of consenting patients and assessed at baseline and on Day 85 compared with skin biopsies from the same area of 10 untreated healthy volunteers (HVs). Gene expression data were generated using Affymetrix HG‐U133Plus2.0 microarrays. Statistical analyses were performed using R packages.

Results: At baseline, 63 transcripts were differentially expressed between lesional and nonlesional skin. Two‐thirds of these lesional signatures were also differentially expressed between lesional and HV skin. Upon treatment with omalizumab,>75% of lesional signatures changed to reflect nonlesional skin expression levels (different vs placebo, P < 0.01). Transcripts upregulated in lesional skin (vs nonlesional and/or HV skin) suggested increased mast cell/leukocyte infiltration (FCER1G, C3AR1, CD93, S100A8, and S100A9), increased oxidative stress, vascularization (CYR61), and skin repair events (KRT6A, KRT16). Lesional signatures were not modulated by treatment in nonresponders (defined based on UAS7 longitudinal changes ≥16).

Conclusion: Omalizumab, in treatment responders, reverted transcriptional signatures associated with CSU lesion phenotype to reflect nonlesional/HV expression levels; this is consistent with observed omalizumab‐mediated clinical improvement observed in patients with CSU.

 

(Last update: 12.2023)

Number of original publications in peer-reviewed journals:580
Number of reviews in peer-reviewed journals:210
Number of publications (original work and reviews) in peer-reviewed journals:790
Cumulative IF for original publications in peer-reviewed journals:4196.39
Cumulative IF for reviews in peer-reviewed journals:1409.32
Cumulative IF of publications (original work & reviews) in peer-reviewed journals:5605.71
Total number of citations: 36,836, h-index: 99 (Web of Science December 2023)36836

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