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Roseomonas mucosa bacteria obtained from healthy volunteers without atopic dermatitis reduced the severity of the disorder in a small, early-phase study of 10 adults and 5 children with atopic dermatitis.

The Beginning Assessment of Cutaneous Treatment Efficacy of Roseomonas in Atopic Dermatitis trial; BACTERiAD I/II study, an open-label phase I/II trial, first looked at the therapeutic use of R. mucosa in 10 adults aged 18 years or older. Three sucrose mixtures with increasing doses of live R. mucosa bacteria were topically applied to two body areas – the antecubital fossae and a body surface of their choice – twice per week for 2 weeks per dose. At 6 weeks, the patients stopped using the mixtures and followed a 4-week washout phase.

Treatment was found to reduce mean antecubital SCORAD (SCORing Atopic Dermatitis) scores by 59.8%. Reduction in pruritus was even more pronounced, with a mean decrease of 78.5%. Treating the hands did not improve disease severity, even in patients whose symptoms improved in other body areas. One explanation may be the increased exposure of the hands to topical antimicrobials and environmental exposures, the researchers noted.

With the success in the adult cohort, the researchers enrolled five children aged 7-17 years in the study. These patients were treated twice weekly for 16 weeks. The pediatric patients experienced a mean decrease of 70.3% in their SCORAD scores. The mean decrease in pruritis was 78.8%.

All adults who responded continued to report improved symptoms after the washout period. The pediatric patients are now being evaluated in a washout period.

Four patients did not respond; three of them had a family history of AD persisting into adulthood. “The association between these complex medical histories and the lack of clinical response suggests that differences in heritable host and/or microbial factors may impact treatment responses,” wrote Ian A. Myles, MD, and his colleagues.

“Overall, our findings suggest the safety of topical R. mucosa therapy and justify continuation of our ongoing trial to assess safety and activity in a pediatric cohort of patients with AD. These studies will additionally assess changes in host serum markers, skin metabolomics, and the skin microbiota by culture and genomic methods.”

 

 


The researchers noted that expanding to the pediatric population will deepen understanding of topical microbiome transplantation and lay the foundation for placebo-controlled trials to assess efficacy.

This work was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the National Institutes of Health. The researchers had no disclosures.

SOURCE: Myles IA et al. JCI Insight. 2018 May 3. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.120608.

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Roseomonas mucosa bacteria obtained from healthy volunteers without atopic dermatitis reduced the severity of the disorder in a small, early-phase study of 10 adults and 5 children with atopic dermatitis.

The Beginning Assessment of Cutaneous Treatment Efficacy of Roseomonas in Atopic Dermatitis trial; BACTERiAD I/II study, an open-label phase I/II trial, first looked at the therapeutic use of R. mucosa in 10 adults aged 18 years or older. Three sucrose mixtures with increasing doses of live R. mucosa bacteria were topically applied to two body areas – the antecubital fossae and a body surface of their choice – twice per week for 2 weeks per dose. At 6 weeks, the patients stopped using the mixtures and followed a 4-week washout phase.

Treatment was found to reduce mean antecubital SCORAD (SCORing Atopic Dermatitis) scores by 59.8%. Reduction in pruritus was even more pronounced, with a mean decrease of 78.5%. Treating the hands did not improve disease severity, even in patients whose symptoms improved in other body areas. One explanation may be the increased exposure of the hands to topical antimicrobials and environmental exposures, the researchers noted.

With the success in the adult cohort, the researchers enrolled five children aged 7-17 years in the study. These patients were treated twice weekly for 16 weeks. The pediatric patients experienced a mean decrease of 70.3% in their SCORAD scores. The mean decrease in pruritis was 78.8%.

All adults who responded continued to report improved symptoms after the washout period. The pediatric patients are now being evaluated in a washout period.

Four patients did not respond; three of them had a family history of AD persisting into adulthood. “The association between these complex medical histories and the lack of clinical response suggests that differences in heritable host and/or microbial factors may impact treatment responses,” wrote Ian A. Myles, MD, and his colleagues.

“Overall, our findings suggest the safety of topical R. mucosa therapy and justify continuation of our ongoing trial to assess safety and activity in a pediatric cohort of patients with AD. These studies will additionally assess changes in host serum markers, skin metabolomics, and the skin microbiota by culture and genomic methods.”

 

 


The researchers noted that expanding to the pediatric population will deepen understanding of topical microbiome transplantation and lay the foundation for placebo-controlled trials to assess efficacy.

This work was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the National Institutes of Health. The researchers had no disclosures.

SOURCE: Myles IA et al. JCI Insight. 2018 May 3. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.120608.

Roseomonas mucosa bacteria obtained from healthy volunteers without atopic dermatitis reduced the severity of the disorder in a small, early-phase study of 10 adults and 5 children with atopic dermatitis.

The Beginning Assessment of Cutaneous Treatment Efficacy of Roseomonas in Atopic Dermatitis trial; BACTERiAD I/II study, an open-label phase I/II trial, first looked at the therapeutic use of R. mucosa in 10 adults aged 18 years or older. Three sucrose mixtures with increasing doses of live R. mucosa bacteria were topically applied to two body areas – the antecubital fossae and a body surface of their choice – twice per week for 2 weeks per dose. At 6 weeks, the patients stopped using the mixtures and followed a 4-week washout phase.

Treatment was found to reduce mean antecubital SCORAD (SCORing Atopic Dermatitis) scores by 59.8%. Reduction in pruritus was even more pronounced, with a mean decrease of 78.5%. Treating the hands did not improve disease severity, even in patients whose symptoms improved in other body areas. One explanation may be the increased exposure of the hands to topical antimicrobials and environmental exposures, the researchers noted.

With the success in the adult cohort, the researchers enrolled five children aged 7-17 years in the study. These patients were treated twice weekly for 16 weeks. The pediatric patients experienced a mean decrease of 70.3% in their SCORAD scores. The mean decrease in pruritis was 78.8%.

All adults who responded continued to report improved symptoms after the washout period. The pediatric patients are now being evaluated in a washout period.

Four patients did not respond; three of them had a family history of AD persisting into adulthood. “The association between these complex medical histories and the lack of clinical response suggests that differences in heritable host and/or microbial factors may impact treatment responses,” wrote Ian A. Myles, MD, and his colleagues.

“Overall, our findings suggest the safety of topical R. mucosa therapy and justify continuation of our ongoing trial to assess safety and activity in a pediatric cohort of patients with AD. These studies will additionally assess changes in host serum markers, skin metabolomics, and the skin microbiota by culture and genomic methods.”

 

 


The researchers noted that expanding to the pediatric population will deepen understanding of topical microbiome transplantation and lay the foundation for placebo-controlled trials to assess efficacy.

This work was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the National Institutes of Health. The researchers had no disclosures.

SOURCE: Myles IA et al. JCI Insight. 2018 May 3. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.120608.

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Key clinical point: Roseomonas mucosa reduces disease severity.

Major finding: There were reductions in SCORAD scores of 78.5% and 70.3% in the adult and pediatric cohorts, respectively.

Study details: Case study of 10 adult and 5 pediatric patients with atopic dermatitis.

Disclosures: No relevant financial disclosures were reported.

Source: Myles IA et al. JCI Insight. 2018 May 3. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.120608.

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