Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (pruritus)
14,546 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Alefacept belongs to the new generation of drugs applied in the treatment of psoriasis. It is an immunomodulatory recombinant, fully human lymphocyte function associated antigen-3/immunoglobulin G1 fusion protein (LFA-3-Ig) CD2 antagonist that targets memory-effector T cells by binding CD2 on the T cell surface. It blocks the interactions of leukocyte functional antigen (LFA)-3 with CD2 interaction. This drug is used to treat moderate-to-severe chronic plaque psoriasis and there was conducted a pilot study of psoriatic arthritis. It was observed that Alefacept had reduced peripheral-blood memory effector T-lymphocyte (CD45RO+) counts, cells which are responsible for sustaining the disease. Pharyngitis, dizziness, increased cough, nausea, pruritus, myalgia, chills, injection site inflammation, and accidental injury were recorded. So far, in the conducted trials no generalised immunosuppression or increased risk of infection or malignancy were observed. The possibility of increased risk of infections and malignancies must be considered because of reduced lymphocyte counts.
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PMID:Possibilities of using alefacept in the treatment of psoriasis. 1532 11

Alefacept treatment has been shown in several multicentre studies to result in prolonged post-treatment remission periods (median duration 241 days). This communication describes the clinical responses of 10 patients to multiple courses of 12 weekly intramuscular injections with alefacept given in combination with available antipsoriatic treatments. It was shown that in this group of 10 patients with moderate-severe psoriasis, 8 were no longer candidates for any more long-term continuous systemic treatment with methotrexate or acitretin, 7 had no options for UVB/PUVA courses and 8 were not suitable for treatment with cyclosporine. In 5 out of these 10 patients alefacept had resulted in a considerable long-term improvement with only mild disease expression, which lasted one year or longer. Patients indicated that these responses were outstanding as compared to the troublesome years before. Another patient reported a major improvement in the quality of life by reduction of itch. In two patients alefacept vastly enhanced the efficacy of dithranol treatment, as compared to previous treatments. Another patient was able to discontinue methotrexate without relapsing during alefacept, in contrast to severe rebound episodes following discontinuation of methotrexate in the past. The long-term responses of 8 out of the 10 patients described in this report indicate that alefacept, in the context of individualised care of patients with moderate to severe psoriasis, can have an important contribution. In particular, the long-term response after stopping alefacept makes this treatment a valuable tool, achieving prolonged disease control in at least some patients with moderate to severe psoriasis.
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PMID:Alefacept modifies long-term disease severity and improves the response to other treatments. 1617 47

Alefacept is a selective immunomodulating, antipsoriatic drug that blocks the LFA-3/CD2 interaction necessary for the activation and proliferation of memory effector T cells by binding to CD2 expressed on the T cell surface. Because the CD4+ count is reduced by alefacept, it is recommended that this count be monitored on a regular basis to ensure that it does not drop below 250 cells/mul. Few side effects have been related to the use of alefacept that differ from placebo even when CD4+ counts drop below 250 cells/microl. The side effects that have been reported are minor and include: headache, nasopharyngitis, rhinitis, influenza, upper respiratory tract infections, pruritus, arthralgias, fatigue, nausea, accidental injury and increases in liver enzymes. Serious infections and malignancies do not appear linked to the use of alefacept. The percentage of patients who developed antibodies against alefacept is very low. Alefacept is a very safe biological therapy for moderate-to-severe chronic plaque psoriasis with few side effects reported. The utility of checking CD4 counts while administering alefacept for 12 weeks appears minimal.
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PMID:Alefacept: a safety profile. 1625 57

Plaque-type palmoplantar psoriasis (PPP) is associated with marked morbidity and frequently resistant to conventional therapies. Patients with long-standing plaque-type PPP failing previous treatments were included and treated with a 12-week intramuscular alefacept. The biweekly evaluation included hyperkeratosis, itching, and pain grading. In all of the seven treated patients significant to complete improvement in hyperkeratosis, pruritus and pain were observed, along with dose reduction or complete discontinuation of additional systemic treatments and without any recorded side effects. Alefacept should be considered as a therapeutic option for plaque-type PPP.
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PMID:Therapeutic hotline. Alefacept in the treatment of hyperkeratotic palmoplantar psoriasis. 2086 12