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Vol. 108. Issue 6.
Pages 502-505 (July - August 2017)
Vol. 108. Issue 6.
Pages 502-505 (July - August 2017)
Opinion Article
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Psoriasis and Psychiatric Disorders: The Next Frontier
Psoriasis y comorbilidad psiquiátrica: la próxima frontera
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J.M. Carrascosa
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jmcarrascosac@hotmail.com

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, F. Ballesca
Servicio de Dermatología, Hospital Universitari Germans Trias i Pujol, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Badalona, Barcelona, Spain
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In May 2015, the developers of brodalumab, a biologic drug that targets the alfa subunit of the interleukin (IL)-17 receptor, unexpectedly decided to halt clinical development of the drug despite the promising clinical outcomes expected on the basis of preliminary findings.1 The reasons given for the decision at the time were based mainly on the observation of suicidal thoughts and behavior (in some cases successful) during clinical trials. The company considered that these would have to be clarified with the regulatory agencies and that they would lead to the inclusion in the Summary of Product Characteristics of restrictions that would have a negative impact on the sales of the drug in a very competitive market.

The news sounded an alarm among dermatologists and led to reflection on how the modulation of inflammatory pathways that are apparently specific to plaque psoriasis by targeting the IL-17 receptor could have an unexpected effect in areas that are, a priori, not connected, such as the patient's mental health.

However, although the controversy appeared novel at the time, a quick search of the literature reveals that, in 1993, Gupta et al. had reported that about 10% of patients with psoriasis reported “a wish to be dead” and that half of these patients reported active suicidal ideation.2 In their conclusion, those authors argued that severe depression and suicidal ideation—until then considered to be a feature only of life-threatening diseases—could also, without venturing into pathogenic explanations, affect certain patients with psoriasis.

However, scant attention is paid to the psychiatric comorbidity that apparently affects patients with psoriasis as compared to the interest in other comorbidities, even though the association could be stronger than, for example, the relationship with cardiovascular complications.3

It is, in any case, difficult to measure psychiatric comorbidity because of the multiplicity of the elements involved. While the relationship between psoriasis and major psychiatric comorbidities, such as depression, anxiety and suicidal ideation, appears to be clear in severe forms of the disease, it is less evident in mild to moderate forms. However, even in the latter case, clinicians frequently detect certain personality disorders or traits in psoriasis patients, such as a negative or problematic attitude to life, impulsive or avoidance behavior, and less life satisfaction.4

However, in order to narrow the focus and concentrate on evidence, the aim in this article is to present findings that will stimulate reflection only on targets that are a priority for and can be identified by clinical dermatologists, namely, anxiety, depression and suicidal ideation.

The existence of a relationship between psoriasis and psychological comorbidities has been known for a long time. Prevalences of depression of up to 50% among patients with psoriasis have been reported by the authors of meta-analyses and cross-sectional population studies. A study that included data from nearly 150,000 patients and 750,000 controls found increased risks for depression, anxiety and suicide of 39%, 31%, and 44%, respectively, compared to the general population.5 The risk of depression in patients with severe psoriasis was up to 76% and younger patients had higher risks for all outcomes compared to older patients. The number and intensity of psychological or psychiatric disorders is also greater when certain sites are affected, in the case of palmoplantar psoriasis and joint disease, for example. The impact of psoriasis on the quality of life of pediatric patients is also significant due to the negative repercussions of the disease during a period that is particularly important in the definition of the individual's relationship with his or her social and emotional environment. The repercussions of psoriasis also extend beyond the experience of patients, affecting those close to them in a manner and with an intensity that gives rise to concern, an aspect that is often neglected in the overall assessment of the burden of the disease.6

Moving beyond the undeniable epidemiological evidence of a relationship between psoriasis and psychiatric comorbidity, the clinician's curiosity may turn to the question of whether there is evidence that elucidates—given the clear statistical relationship—the extent to which psoriasis is the cause of psychiatric comorbidity or whether, on the contrary, it is the psychiatric comorbidity that conditions the course of the skin disease. While warning the reader that it would be difficult to provide a definitive answer to this question, we can say that a discussion of the evidence available does give rise to very interesting insights into our pathogenetic knowledge of both diseases.

One plausible explanation of the relationship between psoriasis and psychiatric disorders would be the existence of genetic links that could predispose the patient to both the skin disease and psychological or psychiatric problems. On this subject, we note that studies have found shared alterations in loci and single nucleotide polymorphisms in the HLA region associated with psoriasis, depression, and schizophrenia.7 However, given the heterogeneity of the descriptions and the polygenic nature of psoriasis, such associations probably offer an explanation of the causal relationship in only some patients.

Another reasonable explanation might be the physical and psychological impact of the circumstances inherent in the disease itself: pain and itching, the presence of facial or genital lesions, stigmatization, sleep disorders, the impact on self-esteem, consequences of the low economic and sociocultural levels often associated with extensive forms of the disease. Such reactions are currently recognized as adjustment disorders (F43.2 in ICD-10 and 308.3 in DSM-5), a category encompassing depressive symptoms caused by a stressor—in this case psoriasis and the repercussions of the skin disease on the lives of these patients. What is clear is that, depending on each individual's idiosyncrasies, the psychological and psychiatric effects of psoriasis can be devastating.

A third, more speculative, hypothesis—but also undoubtedly one that is very attractive to clinicians—arises from the question of whether the inflammatory state of the skin and of the patient as a whole in psoriasis may serve to trigger or exacerbate psychiatric disorders by way of synergistic pathways shared by both processes, independent of reactive (adjustment) disorders caused by the psoriasis and its consequences (physical symptoms, isolation, effect on self-esteem, etc.).

On that point, it is of great interest and current relevance to highlight the fact that high serum concentrations of proinflammatory cytokines (tumor necrosis factor [TNF]-α, IL-6, prostaglandin E2, C-reactive protein, IL-1β, and IL-2) have been observed in a certain percentage of patients with severe depressive disorders, and that the presence of these cytokines has been demonstrated in studies based on high quality evidence, including meta-analyses.8 The first question that comes to the mind of an interested dermatologist is what might be the phylogenetic explanation of the inflammatory nature of depression and anxiety and why they persist in human nature. One theory is that, in past ages, when the chief causes of death were interactions with infectious agents present in the environment and violent encounters with animals or human conspecifics, the state of persistent immune activation and avoidance behaviors associated with anxiety and depression ensured a state of alertness to potential unexpected attacks while minimizing risks and favoring energy conservation (sickness behavior), all of which would have afforded clear evolutionary advantages in a hostile environment.9 Today, by contrast, in a scenario in which the risks have changed, a state of persistent inflammation is clearly disadvantageous and has become fertile breeding ground for autoimmune and autoinflammatory comorbidities and diseases.

Apart from the impossibility of demonstrating the truth of these proposals, and still on the subject of pathogenesis, we may wonder what are the key pathways and mechanisms that trigger and explain the inflammatory state in depression. On one hand, the sympathetic nervous system, in response to stress, anxiety or depression, promotes the release of amines, such as norepinephrine, which stimulate the synthesis of myeloid cells in bone marrow (monocytes, for example) and their release into peripheral blood. These cells then interact with other stress-induced substances, some of which are bacterial products—for example from the intestinal microbiome—such as lipopolysaccharides or flagellin, but more particularly stress-induced damage-associated molecular patterns. Both of these substances can activate inflammatory signaling pathways such as nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) and structures such as NOD–, LRR–, and pyrin domain-containing protein 3 inflammasome. Stimulation of this protein activates caspase, leading to the production of IL-1β, IL-18, TNF, and IL-6. It is very interesting to note that this inflammatory activation also has an inhibitory effect on endogenous glucocorticoid receptors. This resistance to the regulatory effects of endogenous cortisol levels permits the activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, which keeps the proinflammatory pathways open, enhancing and increasing the inflammatory response. These cytokines generated in the peripheral circulation not only act in the periphery but also transfer their effects to the central nervous system through humoral and neural pathways.

However, the central nervous system has its own mechanisms for generating and maintaining inflammation. Through these mechanisms, psychosocial stress may favor the activation of the microglia to create a proinflammatory phenotype capable of releasing CC-chemokine ligand 2, which has chemotactic effects on myeloid cells generated in the periphery. The central action of proinflammatory cytokines, whether they are generated peripherally or in the central nervous system, will lead to decreased availability of monoamines—serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine—by means of various mechanisms, including the activation of the enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, which diverts the metabolism of tryptophan (the precursor of serotonin) into kynurenine, a key element in the pathogenesis of anhedonia.

The same interleukins have an effect on astrocytes, favoring an excess of glutathione and a consequent reduction in brain-derived neurotrophic factor. Interestingly, as occurs in the microenvironment of the skin, once it is triggered the inflammatory process is maintained by pathways and other mechanisms conditioned by the interaction between the elements that are the receptors and producers of the cytokines involved, such as astrocytes, microglia, and oligodendrocytes.10

Perhaps one of the most important and distinctive points in understanding the implication of the impact of inflammatory pathways on the functioning of the nervous system is that some of the molecules involved—for example brain-derived neurotrophic factor—participate in fundamental aspects of neuronal integrity, including neurogenesis, so that a reduction can leave indelible scars on learning and memory processes and the consequences of these scars on the individual's cognitive development may also be irreversible.

Given the effect of inflammation on the normal functioning of the central nervous system, it would seem reasonable to assume that the presence of elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines due to other causes, as occurs in psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis, similar in terms of key elements and mechanisms of action, may increase and exacerbate its consequences and prognosis. The inverse is also true in that the inflammatory state associated with depression can exacerbate psoriasis because the persistent activation of the HPA axis favors the proinflammatory state associated with the skin disease and the exacerbation of the lesions.

As noted above, perhaps one of the distinctive features of psychiatric comorbidity is the limited capacity for regeneration of some of the key neurological elements, which could open the door to a potentially irreversible effect as a result of certain structural or functional disorders. This deterioration could be exacerbated by the presence of other proinflammatory comorbidities, which would also contribute, through inflammation, to the deterioration of the endothelium or to oxidative stress, and could determine and explain, at least in part, the cognitive impairment seen in patients with severe psoriasis (known as mild cognitive deficit). Although discussion of the association between psoriasis and such impairment falls beyond the scope of this article, it is clear that it represents one of the most significant psychosocial sequelae of psoriasis and, if such an association were to be demonstrated, it would justify early and intense therapeutic action in cases of very severe psoriasis.11

Having briefly reviewed the mechanisms that could explain the underlying inflammatory state and the molecular crosstalk between psoriasis and psychiatric comorbidity, we should also consider to what extent these interactions may have direct or indirect implications for treatment. In several studies that specifically assessed this effect, biological treatment with etanercept, adalimumab, and ustekinumab not only improved the skin symptoms of patients’ with psoriasis but also the symptoms related to their underlying anxiety or depression.12 While it is not always possible to establish whether this improvement was the result of the subjective impact of the improvement in skin lesions or to inhibition of the inflammatory process, in some studies the absence of a clear relationship between the two variables made it possible to demonstrate the latter. In addition to these studies in psoriasis, there is also evidence of the positive impact of biologic treatment on psychiatric comorbidity in patients with other inflammatory diseases; in some cases the improvement was greater in patients with a higher levels of acute phase reactants. Once again, the improvement in the signs and symptoms of the underlying inflammatory disease—which was concomitant although not always parallel and proportional to the psychiatric symptoms—is an important factor in any assessment of the impact of treatment on the underlying inflammation. It has also been shown that antidepressant therapy can improve the quality of life and symptoms of patients with psoriasis.

In these final paragraphs, we return to our starting point: the suicidal tendencies observed in patients with psoriasis, an element of great concern in light of their impact not only on our patients’ quality of life but on their very existence. In this context, it is worth recalling that IL-6 has been recognized as the cytokine related to suicide, in that the pathways and key elements it favors (breakdown of tryptophan to kynurenine through the activation of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, reduction of monoamines, and effects on N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors) are largely consistent with those described previously for depression or anxiety.13

This could, at least in part, explain the epidemiologic findings that suggest the association between psoriasis and suicidal tendencies described at the beginning of this article, and could indicate a dangerous bias in the decision to attribute a few cases of suicide over a long follow-up period to a specific drug. In fact, it has been proposed that the purported association between a higher incidence of suicide and treatment with brodalumab coincided with a surge in suicides among middle-aged men with a medium-to-low socioeconomic level which occurred during the economic crisis that started in 2008 in the USA since this demographic was clearly dominant in clinical trials of moderate to severe psoriasis at that time.14 It is possible that brodalumab was simply a propitiatory victim of the combination of an increased predisposition together with a triggering event in the environment.

In any case, the inevitable result has been the inclusion of an assessment of suicidal ideation in the list of issues that must be taken into account and monitored when prescribing any new treatment for psoriasis, particularly in the case of drugs having novel mechanisms of action. The results, at this time, are quite reassuring, although isolated cases of suicide, apparently unrelated to the course of psoriasis, have been reported in patients receiving higher than normal doses.15

In any case, it appears clear that a better understanding of the impact of psychiatric comorbidity on psoriasis and vice versa opens up a new front and confers an ever greater responsibility on dermatologists involved in the management of psoriasis to recognize such problems and to work with psychologists and psychiatrists to help these patients. Another step in our journey towards a global and holistic view of the patient, and also towards an increasingly enriching and demanding view of our specialty.

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Please cite this article as: Carrascosa J, Ballesca F. Psoriasis y comorbilidad psiquiátrica: la próxima frontera. Actas Dermosifiliogr. 2017;108:502–505.

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