4.7 Article

Combination of subtherapeutic anti-TNF dose with dasatinib restores clinical and molecular arthritogenic profiles better than standard anti-TNF treatment

Journal

JOURNAL OF TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12967-021-02764-y

Keywords

Arthritis; Tyrosine Kinase inhibitors; Dasatinib; Bosutinib; Tofacitinib; Anti-hTNF; Combination therapy; Chronic inflammation

Funding

  1. FP7 project TARKINAID [282095]
  2. IMI project BTCure [115142-2]
  3. Marie Curie Action - ITN CodeAge [316354]
  4. FP7 Advanced ERC grant MCs-inTEST [340217]
  5. Research program for Excellence IKY/Siemens

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The study showed that the Tyrosine Kinase inhibitors dasatinib and bosutinib have therapeutic effects on TNF-dependent arthritis in mice. Dasatinib, either as a monotherapy or in combination with a subtherapeutic dose of anti-hTNF biologics, exhibited significant improvement in clinical and histopathological signs of the disease. Combination therapy with dasatinib and anti-hTNF agents proved to have a distinct mode of action in restoring the arthritogenic gene signature, potentially offering an alternative to high-dose anti-hTNF monotherapy and increasing the number of patients responding to treatment.
Background New medications for Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) have emerged in the last decades, including Disease Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs (DMARDs) and biologics. However, there is no known cure, since a significant proportion of patients remain or become non-responders to current therapies. The development of new mode-of-action treatment schemes involving combination therapies could prove successful for the treatment of a greater number of RA patients. Methods We investigated the effect of the Tyrosine Kinase inhibitors (TKIs) dasatinib and bosutinib, on the human TNF-dependent Tg197 arthritis mouse model. The inhibitors were administered either as a monotherapy or in combination with a subtherapeutic dose of anti-hTNF biologics and their therapeutic effect was assessed clinically, histopathologically as well as via gene expression analysis and was compared to that of an efficient TNF monotherapy. Results Dasatinib and, to a lesser extent, bosutinib inhibited the production of TNF and proinflammatory chemokines from arthritogenic synovial fibroblasts. Dasatinib, but not bosutinib, also ameliorated significantly and in a dose-dependent manner both the clinical and histopathological signs of Tg197 arthritis. Combination of dasatinib with a subtherapeutic dose of anti-hTNF biologic agents, resulted in a synergistic inhibitory effect abolishing all arthritis symptoms. Gene expression analysis of whole joint tissue of Tg197 mice revealed that the combination of dasatinib with a low subtherapeutic dose of Infliximab most efficiently restores the pathogenic gene expression profile to that of the healthy state compared to either treatment administered as a monotherapy. Conclusion Our findings show that dasatinib exhibits a therapeutic effect in TNF-driven arthritis and can act in synergy with a subtherapeutic anti-hTNF dose to effectively treat the clinical and histopathological signs of the pathology. The combination of dasatinib and anti-hTNF exhibits a distinct mode of action in restoring the arthritogenic gene signature to that of a healthy profile. Potential clinical applications of combination therapies with kinase inhibitors and anti-TNF agents may provide an interesting alternative to high-dose anti-hTNF monotherapy and increase the number of patients responding to treatment.

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