Abstract

Patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) are suffering from a decreased quality of life despite currently available treatments. In the latest years, novel therapies targeting the IL-17/IL-23 and TNF pathways improved clinical outcome. Despite this, remission of disease is not achieved in a considerable group of patients, continuous treatment is very often required to reach clinical remission, and prevention of PsA in patients with psoriasis (PsO) is currently impossible. A better understanding of PsA pathogenesis is required to develop novel treatment strategies that target inflammation and destruction more effectively and at an early stage of the disease, or even before clinically manifest disease. The skin is considered as one of the sites of onset of immune activation, triggering the inflammatory cascade in PsA. PsO develops into PsA in 30% of the PsO patients. Influenced by environmental and genetic factors, the inflammatory process in the skin, entheses, and/or gut may evolve into synovial tissue inflammation, characterized by influx of immune cells. The exact role of the innate and adaptive immune cells in disease pathogenesis is not completely known. The involvement of activated IL-17A+ T cells could implicate early immunomodulatory events generated in lymphoid organs thereby shaping the pathogenic inflammatory response leading to disease. In this perspective article, we provide the reader with an overview of the current literature regarding the immunological changes observed during the earliest stages of PsA. Moreover, we will postulate future areas of translational research aimed at increasing our knowledge on the molecular mechanisms driving disease development, which will aid the identification of novel potential therapeutic targets to limit the progression of PsA.

Highlights

  • Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is a heterogeneous immune-mediated inflammatory disease with musculoskeletal symptoms including arthritis, enthesitis, dactylitis, and axial involvement

  • The challenges that occur in the recognition and terminology of early PsA hamper the availability of a clear overview of literature focusing on this topic

  • The complex of self-DNA and antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) is protected from extracellular nuclease degradation and functions as a danger-associated molecular pattern (DAMP) in the psoriatic skin where it activates abundantly present plasmacytoid dendritic cells and myeloid dendritic cells [59,60,61]

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Summary

Frontiers in Medicine

A better understanding of PsA pathogenesis is required to develop novel treatment strategies that target inflammation and destruction more effectively and at an early stage of the disease, or even before clinically manifest disease. The skin is considered as one of the sites of onset of immune activation, triggering the inflammatory cascade in PsA. The involvement of activated IL-17A+ T cells could implicate early immunomodulatory events generated in lymphoid organs thereby shaping the pathogenic inflammatory response leading to disease. In this perspective article, we provide the reader with an overview of the current literature regarding the immunological changes observed during the earliest stages of PsA.

KEY MESSAGES
Unraveling Psoriatic Arthritis With Translational Studies
INTRODUCTION
CHALLENGES IN EARLY RECOGNITION OF PSORIATIC ARTHRITIS
Initiation of Psoriatic Arthritis
From Psoriasis to Psoriatic Arthritis
Pivotal Cytokines Involved in the Immunopathogenesis of Psoriatic Arthritis
Mannan induced
CHALLENGES IN STUDYING THE EARLIEST PHASES OF PSORIATIC ARTHRITIS
Findings
NEW HORIZONS FOR TRANSLATIONAL STUDIES
Full Text
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