Schell Stephanie L, Sennett Mackenzie L, Feehan Robert P, Wallace Tierney E, Meiszberg Elizabeth C, Longenecker Amy L, Helm Matthew F, Kirby Joslyn S, Nelson Amanda M
The Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, Hershey, PA, USA.
Br J Dermatol. 2025 Apr 28;192(5):845-856. doi: 10.1093/bjd/ljae495.
Therapeutic options for mild hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) represent a significant gap in the current treatment landscape, with no U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved therapies for early-stage HS. Topical Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors (JAKi) are a compelling option due to the known upregulation of inflammatory JAK signalling in HS lesions and the recent success of systemic JAKi for the treatment of moderate-to-severe HS.
To assess the clinical efficacy of ruxolitinib in a pilot cohort and to investigate the underlying biologic mechanisms associated with clinical response.
This was a pilot single-site open-label prospective 24-week clinical trial of topical ruxolitinib (NCT04414514). Men and women with mild HS (Hurley stage I or II), with active inflammatory nodules, were recruited. All participants were observed for 8 weeks to monitor lesion counts (observational phase); active therapy (treatment phase) was then administered for 16 weeks. Topical ruxolitinib 1.5% cream was applied twice daily, covering the entirety of each HS-affected body site. Clinician- and patient-reported outcome measures were recorded throughout the study. Lesional skin punch biopsies were taken at the start and end of treatment for downstream mechanistic RNA sequencing and histological analyses.
Ten participants were enrolled in the study; four dropped out before the treatment phase of the trial. Six individuals with Hurley stage I (no tunnels) HS completed the study, five of whom successfully achieved Hidradenitis Suppurativa Clinical Response (HiSCR50) through 16 weeks of therapy. In this interim analysis, differential gene expression and gene set enrichment analyses revealed reduced activation of JAK-dependent interferon, interleukin (IL)-6, IL-2 and epidermal growth factor receptor signalling, and antimicrobial and keratinocyte responses. In contrast, signatures of wound healing and lipid metabolism were increased following JAKi treatment, indicating a return to homeostasis. Histological analyses revealed that clinically responsive patients had significantly reduced epidermal and dermal inflammation. Affected inflammatory infiltrate included neutrophils, T cells and plasma cells, with the predominantly affected cell types specific to the patient.
Collectively, the broad activity of topical ruxolitinib on inflammatory signalling processes resulted in promising efficacy, even with heterogeneity in baseline inflammation, in this pilot cohort. Importantly, topical treatment not only resolved epidermal inflammation, but also cleared deeper inflammatory infiltrate. The observed efficacy provides rationale to further investigate topical JAKi and other novel topical treatments in HS.
轻度化脓性汗腺炎(HS)的治疗选择在当前治疗领域存在重大空白,美国食品药品监督管理局尚未批准用于早期HS的治疗方法。局部Janus激酶(JAK)抑制剂(JAKi)是一个有吸引力的选择,因为已知HS病变中炎症性JAK信号上调,且全身性JAKi最近在治疗中度至重度HS方面取得了成功。
评估鲁索替尼在一个试验队列中的临床疗效,并研究与临床反应相关的潜在生物学机制。
这是一项局部用鲁索替尼的单中心开放标签前瞻性24周临床试验(NCT04414514)。招募患有轻度HS(Hurley I期或II期)且有活动性炎性结节的男性和女性。所有参与者观察8周以监测皮损数量(观察期);然后进行16周的积极治疗(治疗期)。每天两次涂抹1.5%的局部用鲁索替尼乳膏,覆盖每个受HS影响的身体部位。在整个研究过程中记录临床医生和患者报告的结局指标。在治疗开始和结束时采集皮损部位的打孔活检组织,用于后续的机制性RNA测序和组织学分析。
10名参与者纳入研究;4人在试验治疗阶段前退出。6名Hurley I期(无窦道)HS患者完成研究,其中5人通过16周治疗成功实现化脓性汗腺炎临床反应(HiSCR50)。在此中期分析中,差异基因表达和基因集富集分析显示JAK依赖性干扰素、白细胞介素(IL)-6、IL-2和表皮生长因子受体信号激活减少,以及抗菌和角质形成细胞反应减少。相比之下,JAKi治疗后伤口愈合和脂质代谢特征增加,表明恢复到内环境稳定。组织学分析显示,临床有反应的患者表皮和真皮炎症显著减轻。受影响的炎性浸润包括中性粒细胞、T细胞和浆细胞,主要受影响的细胞类型因患者而异。
总体而言,局部用鲁索替尼在炎症信号传导过程中的广泛活性在这个试验队列中产生了有前景的疗效,即使基线炎症存在异质性。重要的是,局部治疗不仅解决了表皮炎症,还清除了更深层的炎性浸润。观察到的疗效为进一步研究HS中的局部JAKi和其他新型局部治疗提供了理论依据。