新澳门六合彩

 

Health Canada approves psoriasis treatment discovered through Dal鈥憀ed research

- March 16, 2015

A patient with guttate psoriasis. (Used via Wikipedia under Creative Commons license.)
A patient with guttate psoriasis. (Used via Wikipedia under Creative Commons license.)

Health Canada just gave its stamp of approval to bring a new psoriasis drug to the shelf: Cosentyx. The injection, the first treatment of its kind, was discovered and tested by an international team of researchers led by Dalhousie Medical School鈥檚 Dr. Richard Langley.

鈥淎n unmet need existed in the treatment of moderate-to-severe psoriasis,鈥 says Dr. Langley, professor and director of research in the Division of Dermatology. 鈥淯sing an antibody called secukinumab, we showed that for more than 80 per cent of patients, the secukinumab injection cleared up skin lesions.鈥

In one of the largest psoriasis studies ever reported, secukinumab proved to be almost twice as effective as some other psoriasis treatments currently on the market. It achieved unprecedented levels of clearing 鈥 even in severe cases. Study results were published last summer in the New England Journal of Medicine.

An effective psoriasis treatment


鈥淭he effect is rapid,鈥 says Dr. Langley. 鈥淲e saw 50 per cent improvement within three weeks.鈥

It was initially thought that psoriasis was caused by too much cell turnover in the skin. Instead, recent research has shown that the body鈥檚 immune system releases small proteins that spark the development of the disease.

鈥淚n people with psoriasis, their IL-17A protein levels are six times higher than in normal skin,鈥 says Dr. Langley. 鈥淲hen IL-17A levels are too high, it signals more skin cells to grow. And too many skin cells cause thickened skin and plaque to develop.鈥

鈥淚dentifying that secukinumab blocks IL-17A is one of the most 鈥 if not the most 鈥 impressive results that we鈥檝e seen in psoriasis research,鈥 says Dr. Langley. 鈥淭he approval of Cosentyx, a drug targeting IL-17A, offers a new treatment option for physicians treating this condition.鈥

Psoriasis is a chronic skin disease affecting approximately one out of 50 people. It鈥檚 a systemic illness with widespread implications throughout the body. It causes painful, itchy lesions, and has been linked to a host of other health problems, such as psoriatic arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, depression, obesity, hypertension, ischemic heart disease and stroke.


Comments

All comments require a name and email address. You may also choose to log-in using your preferred social network or register with Disqus, the software we use for our commenting system. Join the conversation, but keep it clean, stay on the topic and be brief. Read comments policy.