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Time-lapse imaging points towards a non-toxic, mainly immune-driven mode of action of ingenol mebutate in the treatment of anogenital warts.

Stephan Alexander BraunErich BünemannJulia BaranBernhard HomeyPeter Arne Gerber
Published in: Experimental dermatology (2018)
Recently, it has been reported that ingenol mebutate (IM) is an effective treatment option for anogenital warts (AGW), inducing fast wart necrosis within 24 hours in vivo. With regard to its mode of action, IM is thought to act both as an inducer of direct cytotoxic effects and immunologic mechanisms. To distinguish whether the wart necrosis is mainly caused by cytotoxic effects, or whether immune mechanisms are leading, we used time-lapse imaging to analyse IM-treated warts ex vivo over 24 hours. Ex vivo IM-treated warts, which have been detached from the immune system, did not show destructive necrosis, pointing towards a primarily immune-driven mode of action of IM in the treatment of AGW.
Keyphrases
  • mass spectrometry
  • replacement therapy