4.6 Article

Bruton's Tyrosine Kinase Inhibition as an Emerging Therapy in Systemic Autoimmune Disease

Journal

DRUGS
Volume 81, Issue 14, Pages 1605-1626

Publisher

ADIS INT LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s40265-021-01592-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Dutch Arthritis Foundation [19-1-201]
  2. Erasmus MC MRace
  3. Target2B! consortium

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Systemic autoimmune disorders are complex chronic diseases involving diverse immune cells, with many patients responding poorly to current therapies. The development of more specific and tolerable treatments is needed. BTK has emerged as an interesting therapeutic target due to its involvement in key signaling pathways driving autoimmunity, with second-generation BTK inhibitors showing promise in clinical trials for autoimmune diseases.
Systemic autoimmune disorders are complex heterogeneous chronic diseases involving many different immune cells. A significant proportion of patients respond poorly to therapy. In addition, the high burden of adverse effects caused by classical anti-rheumatic or immune modulatory drugs provides a need to develop more specific therapies that are better tolerated. Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) is a crucial signaling protein that directly links B-cell receptor (BCR) signals to B-cell activation, proliferation, and survival. BTK is not only expressed in B cells but also in myeloid cells, and is involved in many different signaling pathways that drive autoimmunity. This makes BTK an interesting therapeutic target in the treatment of autoimmune diseases. The past decade has seen the emergence of first-line BTK small-molecule inhibitors with great efficacy in the treatment of B-cell malignancies, but with unfavorable safety profiles for use in autoimmunity due to off-target effects. The development of second-generation BTK inhibitors with superior BTK specificity has facilitated the investigation of their efficacy in clinical trials with autoimmune patients. In this review, we discuss the role of BTK in key signaling pathways involved in autoimmunity and provide an overview of the different inhibitors that are currently being investigated in clinical trials of systemic autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus, as well as available results from completed trials.

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