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Hackers Just Stole Nearly $200 Million from a Crypto Exchange, in the Second Heist in Two Weeks – Futurism
Posted: December 13, 2021 at 2:03 am
Over the weekend, hackers stole almost $200 million from the BitMart cryptocurrency exchange the latest in a seemingly endless string of heists, headaches, and heartbreak for those who invest and trade in crypto.
CNBC reported that although BitMart has admitted to $150 million in losses due to a security breach, the blockchain security and analytics firm PeckShield which was first to notice and publicize the heist said the total appears to be closer to about $196 million.
PeckShield also tweeted that about $100 million of the stolen funds were on the Ethereum blockchain, with the additional $96 million were on the Binance Smart Chain.
Naturally, this being the world of blockchain, the saga played out like absolute chaos. BitMart CEO Sheldon Xia, who according toCoindesk initially claimed the hack was fake news, has since vowed that the company will compensate the users whose funds were stolen with BitMarts own money.
After taking the funds out of users hot internet-connected wallets, the hackers used a privacy mixer to do the cryptocurrency version of money laundering. As such, its still unclear who the hacker or hackers were.
CNBC noted that this is the second time in as many weeks that theres been a large-scale crypto robbery after $120 million was stolen from the decentralized BadgerDAO platform. And in August there were two big crypto thefts as well, one in which hackers took nearly $100 million and another where the thieves made away with $600 million from The Poly Network crypto exchange though, in a bizarre twist, they eventually returned the tokens.
For its part, the crypto community has responded to the BitMart hack by vowing to help strengthen security and head off such attacks in the future.
While its tempting to take this caper as par for the course in the wacky world of crypto, its important to remember that real people put real money into buying these tokens, and that theyre hurting. Its not hard to imagine how much people would freak out if hundreds of millions of dollars were stolen in a bank heist, and this theft deserves just as much gravity.
READ MORE: Hackers take $196 million from crypto exchange Bitmart, security firm says[CNBC]
More on crypto theft: Blockchains Were Supposed to Be Unhackable. Now Theyre Getting Hacked.
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Artist Promises to Sell One of Her Eggs to Whoever Buys Her NFT – Futurism
Posted: at 2:03 am
Everything was normal and nothing was a grift. Egg Head
Non-fungible tokens meet artificial insemination in a piece of art thats for sale at the renowned Art Basel art fair this week.
Artist Narine Arakelian, asPage Six reports, is including a contract promising one of her eggs to whoever buys her NFT, entitled Live, at the Miami art exposition.
The digitized piece of art comes from a physical Live, Laugh, Love triptych,The Daily Beast noted, and the 42-year-old Arakelian hopes that whoever buys it will actually use the egg to have a baby.
My artworks are all my children and the fact this one will actually produce a child is wonderful, she told Page Six. The art will always mean so much to the buyer because it brought them their child!
While the concept is certainly outlandish, this ovarian contract is par for the course for the provocative Armenian artist, whose portfolio includes interactive paintings that are displayed in augmented reality. Shes got chops in the art world, too: in 2019, she lit up a staircase at the Venice Biennale into a kaleidoscopic rainbow.
Amazingly, Arakelians egg NFT isnt the weirdest one for sale at this years Art Basel, or even the only one containing genetic material. Someone, for some reason, implanted Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberrys signature into the DNA code of a bacterial organism, and is selling it as the first living NFT.
Between the egg, the Roddenberry bacteria, and Trump fixer Michael Cohens prison badge being sold as NFTs at the Miami art festival, this was certainly a banner year for this bizarre and arguably useless digital art form.
READ MORE:Artist sells her eggs as an NFT at Art Basel [Page Six]
More on NFTs: Cory Doctorow Roasts NFTs as Massive, Fraud-Ridden Speculative Bubble
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Startup Says It Can Dig Tunnels Really Fast by Melting Through Rock – Futurism
Posted: at 2:03 am
Eat your heart out, Elon!Melting Rock
Instead of crushing through rock with a massive grinder, a startup called Petra is hoping to dig tunnels using superheated gas, Wired reports.
In 2018, according to the magazine, the company tested the technology in an industrial park in California, heating up the stone to above 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Since then, Petra settled on a slightly different method, blasting sheets of rock into tiny pieces using a 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit using gas and heat, a proprietary mix the company is keeping tightly under wraps.
Instead of digging tunnels to alleviate our traffic woes, as Tesla CEO Elon Musk is attempting with his Boring Company, Petra is hoping to revolutionize a very different industry: running underground utility lines.
That may not sound like the most exciting prospect, but given many countries rapidly aging infrastructure, new technologies like this could prove to be a game changer and maybe, eventually, provide some new tools to ventures like the Boring Company.
Petras hot gas method could cut costs of burying these lines by 50 to 80 percent, according to the company.
Every method thats commercially available is a high-contact method that grinds up the Earth it contacts in order to remove it, Petra CEO Kim Abrams told Wired. This is a completely new way to tunnel.
It wasnt always smooth sailing. During early tests, we just ended up melting a lot of the rock and creating lava, and when we created lava, it was effectively holding our system in its tracks, Abrams told the publication.
Now Petra is investigatingwhether the method works on other kinds of stone including limestone or granite.
All told, its intriguing. Moving more electricity lines underground could mean a lot more Americans could enjoy uninterrupted power, something not everybody can take for granted.And accessing the space under our feet for cheap has countless fascinating applications.
READ MORE: This New Tech Cuts Through Rock Without Grinding Into It [Wired]
More on tunneling: Tesla Fan Page Relentlessly Mocked for Incredibly Stupid Post
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Will We Ever Cheat Death and Become Immortal With Mind Uploading? – Interesting Engineering
Posted: at 1:51 am
Humans have always been fascinated with the concept of immortality but what seems to be even more exciting to some is the thought of using technology to make immortality a real-world application. A movement called transhumanism is even devoted to using science and technology to augment our bodies and our minds, and to allow humans to merge with machines, eradicating old age as a cause of death. So the big question is can we really evade death?
From Hans Moravecs classic book Mind Children to Gene Roddenberrys iconic TV series Star Trek: The Next Generation, the idea of uploading a persons feelings, memories, and experiences onto a machine, has been explored in many popular non-fiction and fiction works. However, whether or not mind uploading could become a reality, like 3D printers, robots, and driverless cars? We are yet to find out.
Mind uploading describes a hypothetical process of separating a persons consciousness (which involves their emotions, thought process, experiences, and basically everything that makes a person unique), then converting it into a digital format, and finally transferring the digital consciousness into a different substrate, like a machine.
The process would conceivably incorporate different steps, like mind copying, mind transfer, mind preservation, and whole brain emulation (WBE). Here is a detailed overview of how mind uploading can actually work:
The human brain regularly performs complex processes with the help of its 86 billion neurons that function simultaneously in a large neural network. And the complexity does not stop there. There aremore than 125 trillion synapsesjust in the cerebral cortex alone. That is a lot of information and storage capacity. Some have suggested that, in order to completely replicate an individual's brain, it would be necessary to first dissect the brain.
However, mind uploading advocates claim that noninvasive brain scans can provide sufficient resolution for copying the brain without actually killing the person to do it. The information stored in our brain would then be used to create aconnectome, a complete map of the neural connections in the brain, created using incredibly precise scanning of the neurons, and the synapses.
However, to date, we only have a complete connectome for a 1.5-millimeter roundworm called Caenorhabditis elegans, which has just 302 neurons and about seven thousand synaptic connections.In 2014, theOpenWorm projectwhich mapped the brain replicated it as software and installed it in a Lego robot which was capable of the same sensory and motor actions as the biological model.
Building a human connectome is clearly a much more complicated process. Even in the case of the C. elegans, researchers had to work for more than a decade to understand the organisms neuronal pathway.
Now imagine how much time and resources will be required for the identification of about 86 billion neurons, determination of their precise location, and tracing and cataloging of their projections on one another. Building and interpreting even a single human connectome is inconceivable using existing technologies.
Another proposed method of getting information from the brain is through a brain-computer interface (BCI). There are already existing implanted devicesthat can translate some types of neuronal information into commands, and arecapable of controlling external software or hardware, such as a robotic arm.However, modern BCIs are only very slightly related to the theoretical BCIs which would be needed to allow us to transfer our brain states into a digital medium.
Brain-computer interfaces which would allow mind uploading would need a technology similar to modern-day brain scanning technology. Some suggest that downloading consciousness would require technology capable of scanning human brains at a quantum particle level.
Elon Musks Neuralink is one company working on aspects of mind-uploading. They are designing a neural implant which would work "like a Fitbit in your skull". It would have many micron-scale electrode threads connected to different parts of the brain. While this technology is showing some promise in allowing humans to interface with computers in a limited way, it is not close to the technology needed to upload an entire brain.
Neuralinks website mentions that their chip will kick off a new kind of brain interface technology and as it develops further, they will be able to increase the channels of communication with the brain, accessing more brain areas and new kinds of neural information.
Some wealthy individuals who wish to live foreverare opting to preserve their brains and sometimes bodies through cryopreservation. In theory, in the future when human connectome technology is fully developed, their consciousness could then be retrieved and uploaded. An American cryonics company Alcor Life Extension Foundation already stores around 180 cryopreserved human bodies (with more preserving just their head) at its Phoenix-based facility.
However, some experts also claim that such cryonic techniques may damage the brain beyond repair.
Recently, an MIT graduate Robert McIntyre, rekindled the brain preservation hype when he announced his Y-Combinator backed startup Nectome is building some next-generation tools to preserve brains in the microscopic detail needed to map the connectome.
While previously working at a cryo research firm 21st Century Medicine, McIntyre along with cryobiologist Greg Fahy developed a method that combines embalming with cryonics. Fahy suggests that through this technique they could preserve the entire brain to the nanometer level, including the connectome. They even received an $80,000 science prize from the Brain Preservation Foundation for preserving a pigs brain so well that every synapse inside it could be seen with an electron microscope.
One element of this process that may give some pause for thought, however, is that the "brain embalming" needs to take place while the person is still alive. The company hopes the process will be allowed as part of doctor-assisted suicide programs. Even if it does not lead to an uploading technology, any brains that Nectome manages to preserve might help in the research towards building the human connectome.
Once all the neural activity is mapped out and the connectome is ready, the next step would be to digitize it. According to a rough estimate published in Scientific American, the memory storage capacity of the human brain could be around 2.5 Petabytes (2,500 TB).
While the popular notion is that we only use 10% of our brain, neurologists say this is actually a myth and we actually use almost all of our brain, all the time. That's a lot of storage.
Apart from the storage, we will require a computer architecture on which the brain can be reconstructed in the form of computable code. And there is the issue of power for that architecture.Today, a computer with the same memory and processing power as the human brain would require around 1 gigawatt of power, or "basically a whole nuclear power station to run one computer that does what our 'computer' does with 20 watts," according to Tom Bartol, a neuroscientist at the Salk Institute.
In computing, artificial neural networks (ANN) have been created which are inspired by the biological neural networks. An ANN is based on a collection of connected units or nodes which loosely model the neurons in a biological brain. However, there are some major differences between an ANN and a human (or animal) brain:
Also, the human brain uses approximately 300 times more parameters (neurons combined with synapses) as compared to GPT3, the largest artificial neural network ever built.
Once all the requirements are fulfilled and the artificial brain is ready, the mind can now be uploaded into a simulation, such as a virtual world,like the metaverse, or into a network of artificial brains connected to each other in a swarm (also called hive mind). Another transhumanist idea suggests that the mind can also be uploaded on a humanoid robot. Uploading into a physical robot would require robots that are a lot more functional than any that currently exist.
However, if the consciousness is uploaded as a substrate-independent mind (SIM), and if the SIM is deemed to be conscious, then it will also need toexist in a place and be able to interact with things. This will require virtual reality that is identical to how humans experience actual reality, everything from tasting a soda to feeling the pain of a car accident. All of this will require yet more storage capacity, signal bandwidth, and power.
Neuroscientist Michael Hendricks from McGill University called mind uploading an abjectly false hope in his 2015 report published in the MIT Technology Review. According to Hendricks, scientists still dont know exactly what kind of technology can allow them to replicate a human mind.
In his report, Hendricksalso raised doubts about the success of current or foreseeable freezing methods for brain preserving, as well as methods for retrieving the information stored in the human brain. Furthermore, as an expert on the neural activity of the C. Elegans roundworm, he says that having a connectome is by itself not a sufficient condition to simulate a nervous system.
Even once we figure out the technical side of whole brain emulation, there's still the philosophical part of the equation. Would that emulation still be you? Answering that will require a great deal of thinking about what it is that constitutes consciousness and identity something there is no clear answer to.
Another study reveals, that depending on their personal views on death, suicide, fiction, philosophy, and science, some people may show great support for mind uploading, while others strongly disapprove of any such practice.
Sure, mind uploading has the potential to change human lives forever, but this is also why the advent of this sci-fi technology in the real world might also give rise to a lot of conflicts revolving around its ethical and social impact on humanity.
Steve Jobs once said, "Death is very likely the single best invention of Life. It is Life's change agent. It clears out the old to make way for the new." If this is true, then defeating death by mind uploading may in fact be self-defeating. It would allow a few individuals to go on, but at the expense of everything and everyone else.
For now, a number of scientists, researchers, and tech companies are working towards making mind uploading a reality. Whether they would be successful or not, and how our society would react to consciousness transfer, only the future could tell.
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Will We Ever Cheat Death and Become Immortal With Mind Uploading? - Interesting Engineering
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Bioethicists Okay Human Extinction – Discovery Institute
Posted: at 1:51 am
Image credit: urikyo33, via Pixababy.
These days, anti-humanism is as thick as molasses among the intelligentsia. That includes an ongoing conversation in bioethics about whether all things considered human extinctionwould be a fine thing because of the suffering that never coming into existence would avoid.
Example: A few months ago, Oxford professor Roger Crisp opined that we might not want to stop a huge asteroid from hitting the Earth. FromWould extinction be so bad?:
Consider the huge amount of suffering that continuing existence will bring with it, not only for humans, and perhaps even for post-humans, but also for sentient non-humans, who vastly outnumber us and almost certainly would continue to do so. As far as humans alone are concerned, Hilary Greaves and Will MacAskill at the University of Oxfords Global Priorities Institute estimate that there could beone quadrillion(1015) people to come an estimate they describe as conservative.
These numbers, and the scale of suffering to be put into the balance alongside the good elements in individuals lives, are difficult to fathom and so large that its not obvious that you should deflect the asteroid. In fact, there seem to be some reasons to think you shouldnt.
Perhaps one reason we think extinction would be so bad is that we have failed to recognise just how awful extreme agony is. Nevertheless, we have enough evidence, and imaginative capacity, to say that it is not unreasonable to see the pain of an hour of torture as something that can never be counterbalanced by any amount of positive value. And if this view is correct, then it suggests that the best outcome would be the immediate extinction that follows from allowing an asteroid to hit our planet.
Crisp equivocates a bit at the end, writing, I am not claiming that extinctionwouldbe good;only that, since itmightbe, we should devote a lot more attention to thinking about the value of extinction than we have to date. Good grief. Is the issue really debatable?
Meanwhile, writing in response to Crisp in theJournal of Medical Ethics Blog, University of Calgary professor Walter Glannon shrugs his big brain at the prospect of us being gone.From A world without us:
We cannot predict the sort of lives future people would have because we do not know the sort of world they would inhabit. But the circumstances described above make it difficult to be optimistic. Regardless of the hypothetical value or disvalue of these lives, possible people are not deprived of anything if they do not come into existence.
We have an obligation to collectively act to prevent or reduce the suffering that present and future humans will actually experience. This depends on controlling natural habitats, deforestation, carbon emissions and other processes. Future actual people have the same rights and interests in avoiding suffering as present actual people. The extent of suffering may provide a pro tanto reason to prevent them from existing. Even if there is no such reason, merely possible people do not have these rights and interests because they do not and will not exist. If we become extinct, then the world will go on without us and will be good or bad for no one.
Why do ivory-tower discussions like this matter? Because these nihilists are teaching the society leaders of tomorrow, those who will exert tremendous influence over future public policies and cultural attitudes. With our supposedly best minds suggesting thathuman extinctioncould be desirable, is it any wonder that so many of our young people seem to be despairing?
Moreover, the utter terror of suffering is pathological and leads directly to evil and/or terribly wrongheaded utilitarian policies such as eugenics and social Darwinism. It is also the moving force behind the euthanasia movement, which seeks to eliminate suffering byeliminating the sufferer. Avoiding suffering is also the central philosophical core of thetranshumanism quasi-religion, which seeks to create a corporeal immortality by instilling a new eugenics with very sharp teeth.
So, what should be our attitude toward suffering? It should not be utopian scheming. Nor, to be sure, should it be indifference. Rather, we have a human duty tomitigateeach others suffering, to love and suffer with each other which is the root meaning of compassion. And we can harness our own suffering to grow and become better individuals.
In this regard, for myHumanizepodcast, I recently interviewed the quadriplegic Christian evangelist and disability rights activistsJoni Eareckson Tada,who unexpectedly took a deep dive into this very issue, and in a very intimate and personal way. Regardless of faith issues, her attitude toward and personal response to her own deep suffering is much healthier than the nihilism that has grown so dark within utilitarian bioethics that some dont reject the prospect of human extinction out of hand.
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ENCODE at UCSC
Posted: December 10, 2021 at 7:27 pm
The Encyclopedia of DNA Elements(ENCODE) Consortium is an international collaboration of research groups funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI).The goal of ENCODE is to build a comprehensive parts list of functional elements in the human genome, including elements that act at the protein and RNA levels, and regulatory elements that control cells and circumstances in which a gene is active.
ENCODE results from 2007 and later are available from the ENCODE Project Portal,encodeproject.org.This covers data generated during the two production phases 2007-2012and 2013-present. The ENCODE Project Portal also hosts additionalENCODE access tools, and ENCODE project pages including up-to-date information about data releases, publications, and upcoming tutorials.
UCSC coordinated data for the ENCODE Consortium from its inception in 2003 (Pilot phase) to the end of the first 5 year phase of whole-genome data production in 2012. All data produced by ENCODE investigators and the results of ENCODE analysis projects from this period are hosted in the UCSC Genome browser and database.Explore ENCODE data using the image links below or via the left menu bar.All ENCODE data at UCSC are freely available for download and analysis.
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OCD: Using Genome Data to Predict Risk, Symptoms and Treatment Response – A Free Webinar from the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation – Yahoo…
Posted: at 7:26 pm
Webinar Presenter
Dr. Gwyneth Zai
Dr. Jeffrey Borenstein
New York, Dec. 07, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Brain & Behavior Research Foundation (BBRF) is hosting a free webinar, OCD: Using Genome Data to Predict Risk, Symptoms and Treatment Response on Tuesday, December 14, 2021, from 2pm to 3pm ET. The presenter will be Gwyneth Zai, Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto and recipient of a 2016 Young Investigator Grant.
Dr. Zai will discuss how the human genome holds clues to understanding the heterogeneity and complexity of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). She will explain her team's use of genome data to identify genetic variations that contribute to the risk of developing OCD and which may enable prediction of the response of individual patients to antidepressant medications. Jeffrey Borenstein, M.D., President and CEO of the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation and Host and Executive Producer of the public television series Healthy Minds, will be the moderator. Join by phone or on the web at bbrf.org/decemberwebinar.
This webinar is part of a series of free monthly Meet the Scientist webinars on the latest developments in psychiatry offered by the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation. Please use #BBRFWebinar when sharing or posting about our Meet the Scientist Webinars on social media.
The Brain & Behavior Research Foundation The Brain & Behavior Research Foundation awards research grants to develop improved treatments, cures, and methods of prevention for mental illness. These illnesses include addiction, ADHD, anxiety, autism, bipolar disorder, borderline personality disorder, depression, eating disorders, OCD, PTSD, and schizophrenia, as well as research on suicide prevention. Since 1987, the Foundation has awarded more than $430 million to fund more than 5,100 leading scientists around the world, which has led to over $4 billion in additional funding for these scientists. 100% of every dollar donated for research is invested in research. BBRF operating expenses are covered by separate foundation grants. BBRF is the producer of the Emmy nominated public television series Healthy Minds with Dr. Jeffrey Borenstein, which aims to remove the stigma of mental illness and demonstrate that with help, there is hope.
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OCD: Using Genome Data to Predict Risk, Symptoms and Treatment Response - A Free Webinar from the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation - Yahoo...
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Psoriatic Arthritis vs. Osteoarthritis – Health Essentials from Cleveland Clinic
Posted: at 7:23 pm
You have psoriasis, and now youre experiencing joint pain. Does this mean you have psoriatic arthritis? Or could it be unrelated?
Cleveland Clinic is a non-profit academic medical center. Advertising on our site helps support our mission. We do not endorse non-Cleveland Clinic products or services.Policy
Osteoarthritis is the most common type of arthritis, and, sometimes, it can occur alongside psoriasis. Then again, psoriatic arthritis is also a possibility if you are experiencing skin symptoms, says rheumatologist Rochelle Rosian, MD.
How can you make sense of it all? We talked to Dr. Rosian to find out what these types of arthritis have in common, how they differ and how to treat them.
The word arthritis is kind of a catch-all term, Dr. Rosian explains. Its used to describe more than 100 different conditions that cause pain, swelling and joint damage. Osteoarthritis and psoriatic arthritis are two of those many conditions.
Osteoarthritis, or degenerative joint disease, is the most common type of arthritis. It occurs when the cartilage that cushions your bones wears down, leaving bone to rub against bone.
Since its caused by wear and tear on the joints over time, it usually develops in older adults. Unlike psoriatic arthritis, osteoarthritis doesnt involve inflammation or an overactive immune system.
Common features of osteoarthritis include:
The location of the pain depends on the type of osteoarthritis:
Psoriatic arthritis is a type of inflammatory arthritis. It occurs when your bodys immune system works overtime, creating inflammation throughout your body. In psoriatic arthritis, that inflammation targets the joints and the places where tendons and ligaments attach to bones.
Most people with psoriatic arthritis also have psoriasis, a disease that causes red, scaly patches of skin. Psoriatic arthritis can strike at any age, though symptoms usually develop between ages 30 and 50.
Psoriatic arthritis causes symptoms in your joints and beyond, including:
Joint symptoms:
Skin symptoms:
Other symptoms:
In osteoarthritis, X-rays may show signs like worn cartilage. In psoriatic arthritis, X-rays can show joint damage in later stages of the disease.
But they arent especially helpful in making a diagnosis in the early stages. X-rays can help make an arthritis diagnosis. But they arent always a slam dunk, Dr. Rosian says.
X-rays can also reveal bone spurs, which can develop in people with osteoarthritis and psoriatic arthritis. Those images may reveal differences between the two diseases:
To diagnose joint disease, your healthcare provider will probably consider several factors in addition to X-rays, including:
Getting an accurate diagnosis is important since psoriatic arthritis and osteoarthritis require different treatments.
Medications are often an essential part of treating arthritis. But the medications can differ depending on the type.
Treatments for osteoarthritis include:
Treatments for psoriatic arthritis include:
In addition to medication, you can take other steps to manage arthritis symptoms. These approaches can help whether you have psoriatic arthritis or osteoarthritis:
By making certain lifestyle changes and working with your doctor to develop a treatment plan, you can keep arthritis symptoms in check, says Dr. Rosian.
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Psoriatic Arthritis vs. Osteoarthritis - Health Essentials from Cleveland Clinic
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Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in patients with psoriasis | PTT – Dove Medical Press
Posted: at 7:23 pm
Introduction
Psoriasis is a chronic, immune-mediated inflammatory dermatological disease that affects nearly 150 million people worldwide. It is associated with a significant disease burden, a marked negative impact on patients quality of life,1 and places enormous pressure on health systems globally.24 In recent years attention has focused on the inflammatory processes underpinning the pathophysiological changes in psoriasis. In particular, cutaneous inflammation in psoriasis is linked to chronic systemic low-grade inflammation, which is thought to underlie the associations of psoriasis with comorbidities such as psoriatic arthritis, mood disorders including depression, and a range of cardiometabolic disorders that include myocardial infarction, hypertension, obesity, type 2 diabetes, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), dyslipidemia, and hyperuricemia.3,5
One comorbidity of psoriasis that is increasingly recognized as clinically relevant is NAFLD.3,6,7 NAFLD is characterized by excessive hepatic fat storage and is strongly associated with obesity, type 2 diabetes, and metabolic syndrome. Over time, NAFLD can progress to a more severe, inflammatory disease termed non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and eventually to the development of cirrhosis.8 NAFLD is the most common liver disease and its prevalence is rising rapidly. US studies have reported a 1035% prevalence in the general population with an average of between 20 and 30%.9 The global prevalence of NAFLD is estimated to be 25%.10,11 The presence of NASH in the general population is difficult to ascertain since it can be confirmed only by liver biopsy. However, rates between 1.5 and 6.5% have been reported.9,10,12 NASH is a potentially progressive disease that can lead to cirrhosis in 1225% of cases within a 10-year period, and it is associated with increased risks for hepatocellular carcinoma and cardiovascular- and liver-related deaths.8,13,14
NAFLD has been shown to occur 1.5 to 3 times more frequently in patients with psoriasis than in the general population.3,11,15 Prevalences of NAFLD ranging up to 65% have been reported in this patient population.16 The increased risk of NAFLD in psoriasis patients is not surprising, as the two diseases share a common link with the metabolic syndrome. However, there may be an association between psoriasis and NAFLD that is independent from the metabolic syndrome, hinging directly on the chronic low-grade systemic inflammatory burden characteristic of these two conditions.5 Importantly, when psoriasis co-occurs with NAFLD the disease severity and morbidity of both conditions may be greater.17
The aim of this review is to evaluate the recent literature on the clinical and pathophysiological associations linking psoriasis with NAFLD, independently of the metabolic syndrome, focusing on the chronic low-grade inflammation underpinning the two disorders. Second, we aimed to assess the potential hepatotoxic and hepatoprotective effects of currently approved systemic psoriasis therapies, in particular dimethyl fumarate (DMF), an oral small molecule with pleiotropic effects that could positively impact NAFLD, focusing on the chronic low-grade inflammation underpinning the two disorders. Second, we aimed to assess the potential hepatotoxic and hepatoprotective effects of currently approved systemic psoriasis therapies, in particular dimethyl fumarate (DMF), an oral small molecule with pleiotropic effects that could positively impact NAFLD.
For this narrative review, a targeted search of PubMed up to 14 July 2021 was conducted using the following search strategies: psoriasis with (a) non-alcoholic fatty liver disease/NAFLD (n = 96), (b) hepatotoxicity 1/1/2010 to 14/7/2021 (n = 72), and (c) hepatoprotection (n = 14); psoriasis treatment with (a) hepatotoxicity 1/1/2010 to 14/7/2021 (n = 68), and (b) hepatoprotection (n = 11). Relevant papers were identified by reviewing abstracts or full papers (if required), and by contributory articles cited in the selected references. The bibliography was augmented by key articles known to the authors and, finally, by individual drug data identified via a search of LiverTox (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK548744/).
NAFLD is the most common chronic liver disease worldwide and, in the majority of patients, is strongly associated with metabolic risk factors such as obesity, diabetes mellitus, and dyslipidemia. Individuals with metabolic syndrome have a 4- to 11-fold increased risk of developing NAFLD.18 NAFLD is characterized by fat deposition in the liver, in the absence of viral diseases such as hepatitis B or C, significant alcohol consumption, use of steatosis-stimulating drugs such as methotrexate, steroids, amiodarone and tamoxifen, or certain hereditary conditions including Wilsons disease and cholesteryl ester storage syndrome.19,20
NAFLD includes a wide spectrum of liver conditions with two main histological forms: simple hepatic steatosis (fat deposited, but no damage to liver cells) and NASH, which is characterized by hepatic inflammation that can lead to liver fibrosis. The aberrant pathophysiological processes underlying the progression to NASH are not fully understood, but are thought to include an imbalance of fatty acid metabolism leading to steatosis, and an elevated inflammatory response as a result of oxidative/metabolic stress and dysregulated cytokine production.21 Potential consequences of these processes are the development of lobular hepatitis with perivenular/pericellular (chicken wire) fibrosis, NAFLD-associated cirrhosis and liver failure and, albeit infrequently, hepatocellular carcinoma (Figure 1).5,22
Figure 1 Spectrum of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Data from these studies.5,22
In terms of clinical presentation, the majority of NAFLD cases are either asymptomatic or have nonspecific symptoms such as fatigue and abdominal pain, and/or abnormal liver function test results. NAFLD can be diagnosed if > 5% hepatic steatosis is shown by liver ultrasound in the absence of excessive alcohol use.8 The assessment for potential NASH requires additional testing using non-invasive assessment for liver fibrosis such as vibration-controlled transient elastography or magnetic resonance elastography. However, to confirm the diagnosis of NASH, histopathologic assessment of a liver biopsy is required.
Treatment of NAFLD is limited to optimal management of comorbid conditions such as type 2 diabetes and dyslipidemia, and lifestyle modifications aiming at 710% weight loss through caloric restriction and exercise.8 Weight loss and increased physical activity/exercise can help normalize liver enzyme levels, reduce hepatic inflammation and improve insulin resistance, steatosis and liver histology.23 There are currently no approved pharmacological therapies for NAFLD; oral vitamin E and pioglitazone are options that have shown modest clinical benefits.
The first published evidence in 2001 of a link between psoriasis and NAFLD involved three overweight/obese patients with NASH as confirmed by liver biopsy.24 Since then, various observational and controlled studies have highlighted an increased prevalence of NAFLD in patients with psoriasis.2529 For example, in a large Dutch population-based study (2292 participants aged 55 years) the prevalence of NAFLD was 46% in 118 patients with psoriasis and 33% in individuals without psoriasis.27 Importantly, while elderly study participants with psoriasis were 70% more likely to have NAFLD than those without psoriasis (crude odds ratio [OR] 1.70, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.172.46), the increased risk was found to be independent of common risk factors such as smoking, alcohol consumption, and the presence of metabolic syndrome and its component disorders. A recent single-center cross-sectional study from Spain reported a 52% prevalence of NAFLD among a cohort of 71 patients with psoriasis.15 Of note, 14% of patients had liver fibrosis as diagnosed with transitional vibration-controlled elastography. A large population-based cohort study, using UK data from 197,130 patients with psoriasis and 1,279,754 matched controls, reported an elevated risk for incident cases of NAFLD among psoriasis patients without systemic therapy (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 1.18, 95% CI 1.071.30) and an even higher risk for those receiving systemic therapy (adjusted HR 2.23, 95% CI 1.732.87) compared with the control group.30 The risk for incident NAFLD was also increased among patients with psoriatic arthritis, in particular for those receiving systemic therapy (adjusted HR 2.11, 95% CI 1.552.87). In line with these results, a 2015 systematic review and meta-analysis including 7 case-control studies found that patients with psoriasis had a 2-fold increased risk of NAFLD compared with controls (6 studies; n = 267,761; OR 2.15, 95% CI 1.572.94).31 The risk of NAFLD was significantly greater in patients with psoriatic arthritis (3 studies; n = 505 patients; OR 2.25, 95% CI 1.373.71) and in patients with severe psoriasis (2 studies; 51,930 patients, OR 2.07, 95% CI 1.592.71) compared to those with mild psoriasis. Recently, this meta-analysis was updated to include 2 additional studies (for a total of > 3 million patients and nearly 250,000 with NAFLD).32 The analysis was extended to investigate potential risk factors for NAFLD in psoriasis patients which included hypertension, male sex, hyperglycemia and obesity. Reaffirming the findings of the original systematic review, there was a strong association between psoriasis and NAFLD independent of confounders.
In several studies, the presence and severity of psoriasis were associated with a higher prevalence and greater severity of NAFLD, and NAFLD was a strong predictor of higher Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) scores.25,28,29,31,33 Using Control Attenuation Parameter to assess the degree of fatty liver and body surface area severity of psoriasis, Gandha et al confirmed a positive correlation between the two disorders.34 Furthermore, the progression to more severe forms of liver disease appeared to be higher in patients with psoriasis.35 Roberts et al reported that 48 of 103 (47%) psoriasis patients had NAFLD and 23 of 103 (22%) had biopsy-confirmed NASH, of whom 35% had stage 23 fibrosis.35 The prevalence of NASH was markedly higher than the 12% previously reported in patients with similar demographic characteristics but without psoriasis in the same medical center. Moreover, concomitant NAFLD in patients with psoriasis may confer a higher 10-year cardiovascular risk compared to psoriasis patients without NAFLD.36
In summary, the epidemiologic association between NAFLD and psoriasis is particularly strong given the high prevalence and increased incidence observed among patients with psoriasis. Importantly, this association is more evident in patients with severe psoriasis compared with those with mild psoriasis and is independent of common traditional risk factors such as smoking, alcohol consumption, and the presence of metabolic syndrome and its component disorders.5,31,32
Psoriasis and NAFLD are amongst a number of multifactorial disorders (including cardiovascular diseases and metabolic syndrome) whose pathogenesis is not fully understood, but involves complex interactions between genetic, immunological and environmental factors (Figure 2).5,3742
Figure 2 Common risk factors and associations between psoriasis (PsO) and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Reprinted from Prussick RB, Miele L. Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in patients with psoriasis: a consequence of systemic inflammatory burden? Br J Dermatol. 2018;179(1):1629. 2018 The Authors. British Journal of Dermatology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Association of Dermatologists.5
The pathophysiology of psoriasis is characterized by sustained, self-amplifying inflammatory responses that lead to uncontrolled keratinocyte proliferation and dysfunctional differentiation. Disturbances in both innate and adaptive cutaneous immune responses are responsible for psoriatic inflammation.43 Activation of the innate immune system driven by endogenous signals and cytokines coexists with an auto-inflammatory response in some patients and with T cell-driven auto-immune reactions in others. Thus, psoriasis exhibits traits of an auto-immune disease on an auto-inflammatory background,44,45 with both mechanisms overlapping and possibly potentiating one another. T helper (Th)-1, Th17 and Th22 cells and some of their associated pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin (IL)-17A and IL-22 and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-) are critically involved in sustaining and maintaining psoriasis.4548 The IL-23/IL-17 immune axis is considered to have a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of psoriasis; in line with this, IL-17- and IL-23-antagonists are highly effective treatments for psoriasis.49,50
The pathogenesis of NAFLD is complex and involves multiple pathways. Important pathophysiological mechanisms include genetic factors, insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia, oxidative stress and hepatocyte lipotoxicity, hepatic inflammation, fibrosis, and gastrointestinal dysbiosis.21,38,5155 The various factors are encompassed in a multiple hit model for NAFLD development and progression.21,56 In the early stages of NAFLD, insulin resistancepossibly related to an increase in pro-inflammatory cytokinesplays a pivotal role by increasing the release of circulating free fatty acids, followed by abnormal accumulation of triglycerides in liver cells and hepatic steatosis. This may be followed by a phase in which simple steatosis transitions into steatohepatitis as a result of an increased inflammatory response. Additional pathways subsequently involved in NAFLD progression include mitochondrial dysfunction and liver apoptosis, increased oxidative stress, activation of the profibrogenic transforming growth factor- (TGF-) pathway, and hepatic stellate cell activation and injury.5
While the exact underlying mechanisms must still be fully clarified, both psoriasis and NAFLD are strongly associated with low-grade, chronic inflammation, peripheral insulin resistance, and increased levels of oxidative stress.40,57 Elevated insulin resistance and increased release of inflammatory cytokines are also characteristic of the metabolic syndrome and obesity. Adipose tissue produces adipocytokines (or adipokines) such as adiponectin, leptin and resistin, as well as pro-inflammatory cytokines which play important roles in the pathogenesis of both psoriasis and NAFLD.
Besides the important role of adipose tissue in mediating the interplay between skin and liver, (severe) psoriasis may have a direct impact on NAFLD, possibly via mechanisms beyond overweight and obesity. Indeed, NAFLD in the general population can also occur among individuals who are not obese and have a normal body mass index. These individuals are labelled as lean NAFLD.58 Interestingly, compared to healthy subjects, individuals with lean NAFLD have higher mean serum C-reactive protein (CRP) levels, suggesting that systemic inflammation might be one of the pathogenic factors.58
The secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines from psoriatic tissue into the general circulation may reinforce the prevailing systemic pro-inflammatory milieu associated with NAFLD. IL-6, IL-17, TNF- and CRP produced by the liver (hepatokines) and psoriatic skin have reciprocal direct effects on these organs (Figure 3). The pro-inflammatory effects of adipocytokines and hepatokines are summarized in Table 1. Importantly, there may be a bi-directional relationship between psoriasis and NAFLD through pro-inflammatory pathways, postulated as the hepato-dermal axis.48 Circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF- and IL-17 derived from psoriatic skin, upon reaching the liver, could impact liver inflammation and insulin resistance. Conversely, pro-inflammatory mediators stemming from hepatic inflammation could contribute to the onset or exacerbation of cutaneous inflammation in psoriasis. Pro-inflammatory immune modulators released by adipose tissue and the liver are involved in the promotion of hepatic fibrogenesis in NAFLD as well as psoriasis pathogenesis.5,40,48,59 TNF-, for example, is involved in psoriasis inflammation and has been shown to be an independent predictor of hepatic fibrogenesis and disease progression.60 Another relevant cytokine in this context is IL-17, which plays a central role in psoriasis pathogenesis. IL-17 is able to induce hepatic stellate cells activation and subsequent collagen production.50,61 By doing so, IL-17 facilitates the progression from simple liver steatosis to steatohepatitis.50,61,62
Table 1 Cytokine Levels and Effects of Adipocytokines and Hepatokines in Psoriasis and Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD)
Figure 3 Possible mechanisms linking dysfunctional visceral adipose tissue, psoriatic skin and steatosis.
Abbreviations: CRP, C-reactive protein; IL-6, interleukin-6; IL-17, interleukin-17; NAFLD, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease; NASH, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis; PAI-1, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1; TGF-, transforming growth factor-beta; TNF-, tumor necrosis factor alpha.
Notes: Reproduced from Mantovani A, Gisondi P, Lonardo A, et al. Relationship between non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and psoriasis: a novel hepato-dermal axis? Int J Mol Sci. 2016;17(2):217.48
High circulating (or hepatic) levels of proprotein convertase subtilisin kexin type-9 (PCSK9) have been shown to play a key role in muscle and liver lipid storage, adipose energy storage and hepatic fatty acids and triglycerides storage and secretion. These effects contribute to involvement of the enzyme in the pathogenesis of both NAFLD63 and psoriasis.64
Other shared pathways between psoriasis and NAFLD include modulation of lipid and glucose metabolism, which both play an important role in the development of metabolic syndrome and keratinocyte proliferation in psoriasis.
In summary, there is significant overlap in the pathophysiological factors underlying psoriasis and NAFLD, mostly relating to pathways involving inflammation, oxidative stress, and glucose and lipid metabolism.
Given the strong pathophysiological links between psoriasis and NAFLD and the high prevalence of NAFLD among psoriasis patients, dermatologists should always screen for possible liver disease in their psoriasis patients. A good understanding of the potential hepatic effects of systemic treatments prescribed for patients with psoriasis would also be clinically important. NAFLD-promoting drugs should be avoided, especially in high-risk patients. On the other hand, systemic therapies that reduce systemic inflammation may have a positive influence and mitigate the risk of developing NAFLD. Below, we summarize hepatotoxic and potential hepatoprotective effects of currently approved systemic psoriasis therapies with a focus on NAFLD.
Hepatotoxic risk is associated with the administration of a number of conventional drugs used in the treatment of psoriasis. Evidence for currently approved systemic psoriasis treatments is presented in Table 2.6587 Patients prescribed these medications should be monitored carefully for hepatotoxicity.
Table 2 Potential Hepatotoxic Effects of Some of the Most Commonly Used Systemic Therapies Used in the Treatment of Moderate to Severe Psoriasis
Perhaps the most substantive evidence, and concern, regarding potential hepatotoxicity relates to methotrexate.6570 Early signs of negative effects of methotrexate on liver function include elevated hepatic transaminase levels, but of even greater concern are methotrexate-induced histological changes including aggravation of underlying fatty liver to NAFLD and steatohepatitis with possible fibrosis and cirrhosis.71,72 These more serious adverse hepatic effects have been reported to occur in about 5% of patients treated with chronic, low-dose methotrexate, although rarely in patients without additional clinical risk factors for hepatotoxicity, such as pre-existing liver disease, excessive alcohol abuse, hepatitis B or C, central obesity and type 2 diabetes.71 Given the hepatotoxic concerns, use of methotrexate is preferably avoided in these high-risk psoriasis patient groups, including those with established NAFLD, and methotrexate is contraindicated if bilirubin values are > 5 mg/dl.73
Cyclosporin may cause dose-dependent, reversible increases in serum bilirubin and liver enzymes, with post-marketing experience reporting hepatotoxicity and liver injury.65,68,74 Cyclosporin can also potentially worsen NAFLD by increasing serum lipid levels.75 Close monitoring of liver function test enzymes and lipid parameters is recommended as abnormal values may necessitate dose reductions.68,74,76 Another frequently occurring adverse event associated with cyclosporin use is hypertension, which would be expected to negatively impact NAFLD.
Cases of liver enzyme increases ( 3 upper limit of normal [ULN]) and elevation of total bilirubin levels ( 2 ULN) have been reported infrequently for dimethyl fumarate (DMF), with resolution after treatment discontinuation. Assessment of serum aminotransferases (eg, alanine aminotransferase [ALT], aspartate aminotransferase [AST]) and total bilirubin levels are recommended prior to treatment initiation and during treatment.68,77 DMF is considered to be a possible rare cause of liver toxicity.78
Acitretin has been associated with transient increases in liver enzymes, but hepatotoxicity has been reported rarely.65 As acitretin frequently causes hyperlipidemia, use is preferably avoided in patients with or at high risk of NAFLD.11,75,79,80
No hepatotoxic effects have been documented for apremilast65 and no routine laboratory monitoring is required. Apremilast is considered to be an unlikely cause of apparent liver injury.78
There is evidence of hepatotoxic risk with TNF- inhibitors such as infliximab, adalimumab, certolizumab and etanercept65,8183 and guidelines advocate monitoring liver enzymes during treatment.65 Furthermore, compared with conventional systemic therapies for psoriasis (methotrexate and cyclosporin), treatment with TNF inhibitors (adalimumab, infliximab and etanercept) was found to be associated with significant increases in bodyweight and body mass index in a network meta-analysis (6 studies and 862 psoriasis patients).84 Increases in body weight might be associated with a reduction in the therapeutic response and/or exacerbations of comorbidities, although this needs to be confirmed in prospective studies. TNF inhibitors should be used cautiously in patients with or at high risk of NAFLD.
Other biologicals such as anti-IL17 agents (brodalumab, ixekizumab and secukinumab) and ustekinumab (anti-IL12/23) have been less widely investigated, but have generally exhibited minimal hepatotoxicity (Table 2). A retrospective study of 44 psoriasis patients receiving ustekinumab identified 6 cases (13.6%) of mild elevated transaminases, with no cases of severe hypertransaminasemia.85 Overall, the reported rate of mild-to-moderate serum aminotransferase elevations following ustekinumab therapy was 0.5% to 1.4%. There have been no reports of treatment-related symptomatic acute liver injury or jaundice linked to ustekinumab therapy.78 Interestingly, limited data found no increases in bodyweight in patients treated with ustekinumab.84,88
Analysis of over 3000 patients in clinical trials of the IL-17 antagonist secukinumab in psoriasis showed low rates of serum liver enzyme elevations compared to placebo and no cases of treatment-related liver injury. Post-marketing data have revealed no reports of liver injury due to secukinumab therapy.78 Similarly, clinical trials (> 3000 patients) and post-marketing studies of the anti-IL-17 biologic brodalumab have shown no evidence of liver enzyme elevation nor liver injury attributable to the agent.78 Comparable rates of serum liver enzyme elevations with the IL-17 antagonist ixekizumab and placebo were found in clinical trials, with no treatment-related cases of liver injury. Although post-marketing approval experience with ixekizumab is relatively limited, no cases of treatment-related liver injury have been reported.78 For newer anti-IL-23 biologics recently approved for the treatment of psoriasis (eg, guselkumab, risankizumab, and tildrakizumab), no evidence of acute liver injury or reactivation of hepatitis B or worsening of hepatitis C has been reported to date, but clinical experience with these agents is very limited (Table 2).
Assessment of hepatoprotection can be derived from several different research pathways including in vitro experiments, animal models and monitoring of potential biomarkers (Table 3).89108 Given the common etiology of inflammation between psoriasis and NAFLD, it might be postulated that systemic therapies for psoriasis that attenuate systemic inflammation may also have beneficial effects on NAFLD by targeting pro-inflammatory cytokines.109 However, to date, clinical data are scarce for any direct hepatoprotective effects of systemic psoriasis treatments.
Methotrexate has exhibited beneficial effects on cardiovascular inflammation91,92 as well as decreasing serum levels of PCSK9, which is a likely marker of improved lipid metabolism (Table 3).89 However, a large placebo-controlled RCT failed to show any benefits of methotrexate on the risk of cardiovascular events.110 Furthermore, the potential hepatotoxic risks associated with methotrexate therapy, as discussed earlier, would generally preclude its use in patients with NAFLD.
From the clinical study of Krahel et al,89 acitretin treatment was shown to increase PCSK9 levels, but there was no correlation between these elevated levels and markers of liver function such as transaminases in hepatic steatosis and NASH in high-risk patients (Table 3). Fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) 21 and 23 are markers for cardiometabolic disorders which are common in psoriasis. In one small trial, acitretin was reported to decrease FGF-21 by three-fold which was significantly greater than the reduction observed with methotrexate.90 In an earlier small clinical trial, it was shown that patients with chronic psoriasis treated with acitretin had reduced retinol-binding protein-4 levels and decreased insulin resistance.111 Given the link between psoriasis and increased insulin resistance/diabetes these changes could be clinically meaningful if confirmed in a larger study.111
There is a paucity of data on the potential hepatoprotective effects of cyclosporin. In a small group of patients with moderate to severe psoriasis, comorbidity with diabetes or metabolic syndrome did not affect the efficacy of cyclosporin.93 In another clinical study, cyclosporin significantly improved patients psoriasis symptoms and this was associated with increased transcription activity of TGF1 at the end of treatment in those with or without diabetes, and with or without metabolic syndrome.112 Through inhibition of the enzyme cyclophilin, cyclosporin has shown beneficial effects on liver fibrosis and cirrhosis in some patients. However, calcineurin-related toxicity has limited the possibility of long-term therapy and has required that dosages be kept low.113
Apremilast is a phosphodiesterase 4 inhibitor shown to be clinically effective in patients with psoriasis and/or psoriatic arthritis and also acts as a metabolic modulator. In individual cases, apremilast was shown to improve glucose metabolism114 and lipid profile.115 Similar findings were reported in a 1-year open observational study (Table 3).94
DMF, and its active metabolite monomethylfumarate (MMF), are of particular interest in the context of this review due to their unique multiple mechanisms of action (Figure 4).102,103,105,116,117 These include immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory mechanisms that are potentially advantageous in psoriatic patients with comorbid NAFLD (Table 3). 116 For example, DMF/MMF regulates cellular responses to oxidative stress by modulating intracellular glutathione levels.102 DMF/MMF also reduces oxidative stress through activation of Nrf2 (nuclear factor erythroid 2related factor 2) which stimulates cytoprotective and anti-inflammatory factors such as HO-1 (heme oxygenase-1);103,106,116 and through inhibiting genes regulated by the transcription factor HIF-1 (hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha) and STAT3/STAT1 (signal transducer and activator of transcription) pathways.116 MMF is an agonist for hydroxy-carboxylic acid receptor 2 (HCA2/ GPR109A [G protein-coupled receptor 109A]) which inhibits neutrophil adhesion and recruitment by COX-1 (cyclooxygenase 1) and PGE2 (prostaglandin E2).116 Fumaric acid esters significantly reduced total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein and apolipoprotein B levels in a prospective trial involving psoriasis patients.96 In animal models, DMF has shown potential to ameliorate acetaminophen-induced hepatic injury in mice,107 as well as liver ischemia/reperfusion injury in rats.104 Improvement of liver function and anti-oxidant status might prove to be a promising treatment approach in patients with psoriasis and comorbid NAFLD.
Figure 4 Proposed mechanisms of action of dimethyl fumarate/monomethyl fumarate (DMF/MMF).
Note: Data from these studies.102,103,105,116,117
Adalimumab was shown to reduce key markers of systemic inflammation including glycoprotein acetylation, CRP, IL-6 and TNF and this was associated with beneficial cardiovascular effects such as improved endothelial dysfunction as measured by flow-mediated dilation.95,96 TNF- inhibitors have been reported to improve insulin resistance in patients with rheumatoid arthritis118,119 and ankylosing spondylitis,118,120 but not in obese patients with either type 2 diabetes121 or metabolic syndrome.122,123 Seitz et al investigated the impact of TNF- inhibitors on the presence of liver fibrosis in patients with psoriatic arthritis and rheumatoid arthritis treated with methotrexate.124 Patients with psoriatic arthritis had a higher incidence of liver steatosis and hyperlipidemia and in this study. TNF- inhibitors exerted a protective effect against the development of liver fibrosis.
Secukinumab has been shown to have neutral effects on fasting plasma glucose, lipid parameters and liver enzymes, while reducing levels of CRP, a marker for systemic inflammation. It was also associated with a reduction in markers of oxidative stress. Secukinumab produced greater improvement in arterial elasticity, coronary artery function and myocardial deformation indices compared with methotrexate and cyclosporin. However, no data are available on the impact of these effects on liver function.97,98
Ustekinumab significantly decreases pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as TNF-, IL-1b, IL-17a and IL-6. VCAM-1 was significantly reduced by ustekinumab at 12 weeks, although this effect was not sustained at 1 year. Overall, ustekinumab transiently reduced aortic vascular inflammation at 12 weeks and, longer term, produced a more durable reduction in inflammatory cytokines associated with cardiovascular disease.101 No published studies have investigated the impact of this effect on liver inflammation and function.
NAFLD is an increasingly prevalent and clinically important comorbidity occurring in up to 65% of patients with psoriasis. The occurrence of NAFLD in psoriasis can have significant morbidity and mortality potential. There are multiple pathophysiological pathways that link psoriasis with NAFLD, in particular systemic inflammation and insulin resistance. Reducing systemic inflammatory burden may provide an opportunity to reduce the progression or even ameliorate NAFLD.
A number of conventional drugs used in the treatment of psoriasis are associated with hepatotoxic risk. Most evidence relates to use of methotrexate which, along with other NAFLD-promoting drugs, is best avoided in psoriasis patients with clinical risk factors for hepatotoxicity or established NAFLD. Despite the expectation that systemic psoriasis treatments might reduce the progression of or even ameliorate NAFLD by targeting pro-inflammatory cytokines, clinical data for direct hepatoprotective effects of these therapies are relatively scarce. Through its pleiotropic mechanisms of action contributing to its anti-inflammatory activity, DMF may have additional hepatoprotective effects of possible advantage in psoriatic patients with NAFLD.
However, real-world data on the effects of DMF in patients with psoriasis and concomitant NAFLD is currently lacking, and further studies with DMF and other systemic psoriasis therapies in routine clinical practice would be needed to inform therapeutic decision-making strategies for psoriasis patients with NAFLD.with DMF and other systemic psoriasis therapies in routine clinical practice would be needed to inform therapeutic decision-making strategies for psoriasis patients with NAFLD.
The authors thank Dr Rob Furlong and Dr Steve Clissold on behalf of Content Ed Net, Spain for editorial support, which was sponsored by Almirall, Barcelona, Spain, and performed in line with Good Publishing Practice (GPP-3) guidelines.
This article was supported by an unrestricted educational grant from Almirall, Barcelona, Spain.
DMWB is a consultant/speaker for AbbVie, Almirall, Celgene, Eli Lilly, Galderma, Janssen, LEO Pharma, Novartis, and Regeneron/Sanofi Genzyme. IK is an employee of Almirall, Barcelona, Spain. SP is a consultant/speaker for AbbVie, Almirall, Celgene, Eli Lilly, Galderma, Janssen, LEO Pharma, Novartis, UCB, and Pfizer. The authors report no other conflicts of interest in this work.
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Psoriasis Volunteering: Benefits and Pitfalls – Everyday Health
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The announcement of the 2021 Outstanding Volunteer Leader of the Year Award came at the end of the National Psoriasis Foundations virtual October Community Conference. I felt honored to be one of the nine finalists and thought that any of the other nominees would be deserving of this honor.
To my great surprise,I heard my name announced as the winner and saw my picture flash on the screen. My wife, Lori, gave me a hug, while those at the conference messaged me their congratulations.
Volunteering is a big part of who I am. Over the years, Ive given my time and energy to local food banks, churches, schools, and youth sports teams, and as a church minister I recruited and supported volunteers. Ive volunteered with the National Psoriasis Foundation (NPF) for years, hoping to improve the lives of those impacted by psoriatic disease.
A fellow NPF volunteer at the conference rightly noted that we dont do what we do for the recognition; we do it to help others. Still, Ive personally experienced many benefits from volunteering that I hope encourage you to volunteer as well.
Here are five ways volunteering has made my life better plus one pitfall to watch out for.
One great benefit of volunteering is meeting people who care about the same causes you do, with similar values. My first advocacy event with the NPF introduced me to a community of people from diverse backgrounds, all united by a desire to help the psoriatic disease community.
One experience that stands out was in April 2015, when I drove 30 minutes to the California State Capitol in Sacramento to join fellow NPF volunteers for the first annual California Lobby Day. Our mission was to talk to state legislators about bills related to access to medical care. The connections and friendships I made at the Lobby Day are ones I still greatly appreciate today.
I become particularly self-focused when my psoriasis is not doing well. Self-care is important during those times, but I also find myself losing perspective and imagining worst-case scenarios.
For me, volunteering can help remedy this by redirecting my focus outward. For instance, organizing the first Sacramento Team NPF Walk came at a tough time for me. I felt challenged by my work on many fronts and my psoriasis was flaring, which was causing me to stress about potentially changing biologics.
Putting my attention on the event led me to see my difficulties in a new light. I found joy in planning the Walk path, talking to dermatology offices, and inviting participants to join the fundraiser. All this gave me more energy to address my own personal concerns.
RELATED: How to Beat the Psoriasis-Stress Cycle
Finding ways to make a difference through volunteering can give your life meaning and purpose.
Im motivated by making a difference in the lives of others. Whether its serving a Thanksgiving meal to those who experience food insecurity or teaching a youth baseball player how to field a grounder, I want to uplift others. In the process, I find my own life is enriched.
Ive dedicated my NPF volunteer work to areas where I feel I can have the greatest impact, such as using education to reduce the stigma that often accompanies psoriasis. Through fundraising events, I also hope to assist in bringing about better treatments and a cure, and I strive to support fellow patients in advocating for themselves and others.
Volunteering can provide opportunities to develop or utilize your skill set. Ive grown my teaching skills as a youth coach, and my social media engagement has increased as an NPF Social Ambassador. Ive taught and trained volunteers on how to lead a meeting and mentor college students at church.
Im a reserved and introverted person, but volunteering has also taught me a lot about boldness and assertiveness. At work Ive cultivated skills in public speaking and leading teams, but asking legislators to support a bill that would help those in the chronic illness community felt different and even scary.
In some of those legislative meetings, I was the one who needed to give the ask. Over time it became more natural for me to assert myself in those situations and, consequently, in other areas of my life.
Its easy for me to get overwhelmed by the size and needs of the psoriasis community. When I think about the more than 8 million people in the United States and 125 million worldwide living with psoriatic disease, I feel small. Instead of doing something proactive, I sometimes find myself complaining.
Volunteering provides a positive direction to channel that unproductive energy. Instead of bemoaning the problem, I can be part of the solution. Joining a patient advocacy organization like the NPF brings me together with others who are rowing in the same direction. Together, we can bring about a cure for psoriasis and improve lives.
RELATED: You Yes, You! Can Become a Psoriasis Patient Advocate
While I love to volunteer, I do find myself overcommitted from time to time. I want to do it all, but when my health warrants more attention or work is especially busy, Ive learned when to pull back or say no.
Still, there are so many ways to contribute to the betterment of others through volunteering, and what compels me may be different than what excites you. If you have time and energy to offer, consider how you can get involved and experience the joy of giving to others.
Learn more about volunteering with the National Psoriasis Foundation.
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