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Thyroid Autoimmunity in CSU: A Potential Marker of Omalizumab Response?

Riccardo AseroSilvia Mariel FerrucciPaolo CalzariDario ConsonniMassimo Cugno
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
The response of severe chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) to omalizumab largely depends on the autoimmune or autoallergic endotype of the disease. Whether thyroid autoimmunity may predict omalizumab response along with total IgE in CSU is still unclear. Three hundred and eighty-five patients (M/F 123/262; mean age 49.5 years; range 12-87 years) with severe CSU were studied. Total IgE levels and thyroid autoimmunity (levels of anti-thyroid peroxidase [TPO] IgG) were measured before omalizumab treatment. Based on the clinical response, patients were divided into early (ER), late (LR), partial (PR) and non (NR) responders to omalizumab. Thyroid autoimmunity was detected in 92/385 (24%) patients. Altogether, 52%, 22%, 16% and 10% of patients were ER, LR, PR and NR to omalizumab, respectively. Response to omalizumab was not associated with thyroid autoimmunity ( p = 0.77). Conversely, we found a strongly positive association between IgE levels and omalizumab response ( p < 0.0001); this association was largely driven by early response (OR = 5.46; 95% CI: 2.23-13.3). Moreover, the predicted probabilities of early response strongly increased with increasing IgE levels. Thyroid autoimmunity alone cannot be used as a clinical predictor of omalizumab response. Total IgE levels remain the only and most reliable prognostic marker for omalizumab response in patients with severe CSU.
Keyphrases
  • end stage renal disease
  • ejection fraction
  • newly diagnosed
  • chronic kidney disease
  • early onset
  • endoplasmic reticulum
  • atopic dermatitis