Description
Although the newly developed biologics targeting IL-23/Th17 axis are highly effective in controlling psoriasis, all the biologics should be continuously injected to suppress recurrence of the disease. In this regard, the observation in our phase I psoriasis clinical trial was groundbreaking that just a single dose of anti-IL-23p19 antibody administration produced disease clearance up to 66 weeks in 46% (6 of 13) of patients. Since FoxP3 mRNA levels remained high in posttreatment biopsy specimens of these patients, we hypothesized that IL-23p19 inhibition increased regulatory T-cell levels or function in resolved psoriatic skin. However, there is a lack of understanding about regulatory immune cell promotion by IL-23p19 inhibition in human skin.
Our overall objectives of the study, are to (i) identify regulatory immune cell alterations induced by anti-IL-23p19 antibody administration in the skin of patients whose psoriasis is cleared without recurrence and (ii) develop pre-treatment predictive models for psoriasis patients that anticipate disease clearance and recurrence after short-term anti-IL-23p19 antibody injection. The rationale for this project is that molecular evidence of immune tolerance induction by IL-23p19 inhibition in human skin is likely to offer a strong clinical framework whereby new strategies to prevent recurrence of chronic inflammatory diseases can be developed. In this study, subjects with moderate-to-severe psoriasis will receive FDA-approved anti-IL-23p19 antibody (Generic name: Risankizumab, Product name: SKYRIZI™ or risankizumab-rzaa) up to 4 months following the FDA-approved indications, usage, dosage, and administration in the FDA-approved dosage forms and strengths through week 16, after which, dosing stops.