Tag: alopecia

Microneedle Patch Could Take the Pain out of Alopecia Treatments

Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya

Researchers at MIT, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and Harvard Medical School have developed a potential new treatment for alopecia areata, an autoimmune disorder that causes hair loss and affects people of all ages, including children.

For most patients with this type of hair loss, there is no effective treatment. The team developed a microneedle patch that can be painlessly applied to the scalp and releases drugs that help to rebalance the immune response at the site, halting the autoimmune attack.

In mice, this treatment allowed hair to regrow in mice and dramatically reduced inflammation at the treatment site, while avoiding systemic immune effects elsewhere in the body. This strategy could also be adapted to treat other autoimmune skin diseases such as vitiligo, atopic dermatitis, and psoriasis, the researchers say.

“This innovative approach marks a paradigm shift. Rather than suppressing the immune system, we’re now focusing on regulating it precisely at the site of antigen encounter to generate immune tolerance,” says Natalie Artzi, a principal research scientist in MIT’s Institute for Medical Engineering and Science, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and an associate faculty member at the Wyss Institute of Harvard University.

Artzi and Jamil R. Azzi, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, are the senior authors of the new study, which appears in the journal Advanced Materials. Nour Younis, a Brigham and Women’s postdoc, and Nuria Puigmal, a Brigham and Women’s postdoc and former MIT research affiliate, are the lead authors of the paper.

The researchers are now working on launching a company to further develop the technology, led by Puigmal, who was recently awarded a Harvard Business School Blavatnik Fellowship.

Targeted delivery

Alopecia areata occurs when the body’s own T cells attack hair follicles, leading the hair to fall out. The only treatment available to most patients – injections of immunosuppressant steroids into the scalp – is painful and patients often can’t tolerate it.

Some patients with alopecia areata and other autoimmune skin diseases can also be treated with immunosuppressant drugs that are given orally, but these drugs lead to widespread suppression of the immune system, which can have adverse side effects.

“This approach silences the entire immune system, offering relief from inflammation symptoms but leading to frequent recurrences. Moreover, it increases susceptibility to infections, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer,” Artzi says.

A few years ago, at a working group meeting in Washington, Artzi happened to be seated next to Azzi (the seating was alphabetical), an immunologist and transplant physican who was seeking new ways to deliver drugs directly to the skin to treat skin-related diseases.

Their conversation led to a new collaboration, and the two labs joined forces to work on a microneedle patch to deliver drugs to the skin. In 2021, they reported that such a patch can be used to prevent rejection following skin transplant. In the new study, they began applying this approach to autoimmune skin disorders.

“The skin is the only organ in our body that we can see and touch, and yet when it comes to drug delivery to the skin, we revert to systemic administration. We saw great potential in utilising the microneedle patch to reprogram the immune system locally,” Azzi says.

The microneedle patches used in this study are made from hyaluronic acid crosslinked with polyethylene glycol (PEG), both of which are biocompatible and commonly used in medical applications. With this delivery method, drugs can pass through the tough outer layer of the epidermis, which can’t be penetrated by creams applied to the skin.

“This polymer formulation allows us to create highly durable needles capable of effectively penetrating the skin. Additionally, it gives us the flexibility to incorporate any desired drug,” Artzi says. For this study, the researchers loaded the patches with a combination of the cytokines IL-2 and CCL-22. Together, these immune molecules help to recruit T reg cells, which proliferate and help to tamp down inflammation. These cells also help the immune system learn to recognise that hair follicles are not foreign antigens, so that it will stop attacking them.

Hair regrowth

The researchers found that mice treated with this patch every other day for three weeks had many more T reg cells present at the site, along with a reduction in inflammation. Hair was able to regrow at those sites, and this growth was maintained for several weeks after the treatment ended. In these mice, there were no changes in the levels of T reg cells in the spleen or lymph nodes, suggesting that the treatment affected only the site where the patch was applied.

In another set of experiments, the researchers grafted human skin onto mice with a humanised immune system. In these mice, the microneedle treatment also induced proliferation of T reg cells and a reduction in inflammation.

The researchers designed the microneedle patches so that after releasing their drug payload, they can also collect samples that could be used to monitor the progress of the treatment. Hyaluronic acid causes the needles to swell about tenfold after entering the skin, which allows them to absorb interstitial fluid containing biomolecules and immune cells from the skin.

Following patch removal, researchers can analyse samples to measure levels of T reg cells and inflammation markers. This could prove valuable for monitoring future patients who may undergo this treatment.

The researchers now plan to further develop this approach for treating alopecia, and to expand into other autoimmune skin diseases.

Source: Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Regulatory T Cells Play a Surprising Role in Hair Growth

Photo by Engin Akyurt on Unsplash

In an unexpected finding in studying alopecia, scientists have uncovered an unexpected link between T cells and hair growth, which could potentially be used to treat the condition. The findings, published in Nature Immunology, describe how regulatory T cells interact with skin cells using a hormone as a messenger to generate new hair follicles and hair growth.

Alopecia is an autoimmune condition where the immune system attacks the hair follicles, resulting in hair loss.

“For the longest time, regulatory T cells have been studied for how they decrease excessive immune reactions in autoimmune diseases,” explained Ye Zheng, associate professor at the Salk Institute and the paper’s corresponding author. “Now we’ve identified the upstream hormonal signal and downstream growth factor that actually promote hair growth and regeneration completely separate from suppressing immune response.”

Initially, the researchers were investigating the roles of regulatory T (Treg) cells and glucocorticoid hormones in autoimmune diseases. (Glucocorticoid hormones are cholesterol-derived steroid hormones produced by the adrenal gland and other tissues.) They first investigated how these immune components functioned in multiple sclerosis, Crohn’s disease and asthma.

They found that glucocorticoids and Treg cells did not function together to play a significant role in any of these conditions. So, they thought they’d have more luck looking at environments where Treg cells expressed particularly high levels of glucocorticoid receptors (which respond to glucocorticoid hormones), such as in skin tissue. The scientists induced hair loss in normal mice and mice lacking glucocorticoid receptors in their Treg cells.

“After two weeks, we saw a noticeable difference between the mice — the normal mice grew back their hair, but the mice without glucocorticoid receptors barely could,” says first author Zhi Liu, a postdoctoral fellow in Associate Prof Zheng’s lab. “It was very striking, and it showed us the right direction for moving forward.”

The findings suggested that some sort of communication must be occurring between Treg cells and hair follicle stem cells to allow for hair regeneration.

The scientists then investigated how the regulatory T cells and glucocorticoid receptors behaved in skin tissue samples, and found that glucocorticoids instruct the Treg cells to activate hair follicle stem cells, leading to hair growth. This crosstalk between the T cells and the stem cells depends on a mechanism whereby glucocorticoid receptors induce production of the protein TGF-beta3, all within the regulatory T cells. TGF-beta3 then activates the hair follicle stem cells to differentiate into new hair follicles, promoting hair growth. Additional analysis confirmed that this pathway was completely independent of regulatory T cells’ ability to maintain immune balance.

However, Treg cells don’t normally produce TGF-beta3, as they did here. A database search revaled that this phenomenon occurs in injured muscle and heart tissue, similar to how hair removal simulated a skin tissue injury in this study.

“In acute cases of alopecia, immune cells attack the skin tissue, causing hair loss. The usual remedy is to use glucocorticoids to inhibit the immune reaction in the skin, so they don’t keep attacking the hair follicles,” said Associate Prof Zheng. “Applying glucocorticoids has the double benefit of triggering the regulatory T cells in the skin to produce TGF-beta3, stimulating the activation of the hair follicle stem cells.”

This study revealed that Treg cells and glucocorticoid hormones are not just immunosuppressants but also have a regenerative function. Next, the scientists will look at other injury models and isolate Treg cells from injured tissues to monitor increased levels of TGF-beta3 and other growth factors.

Source: Salk Institute

New Hope for Alopecia Treatment with JAK Inhibitor Baricitinib

Before and after images for participants who received 36 weeks of treatment for alopecia areata with baricitinib. Credit: Yale University

Results from a new study in three patients with alopecia areata treated with a Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor, baricitinib, were able to regrow hair. The study is based on Phase III clinical trials using baricitinib – a drug commonly used for arthritis – to treat alopecia areata, a skin disease characterised by loss of hair from the scalp and sometimes eyebrows and eyelashes.

“This is so exciting, because the data clearly show how effective baricitinib is,” said Dr. Brett King, an associate professor of dermatology at the Yale School of Medicine and lead author of the new study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine. “These large, controlled trials tell us that we can alleviate some of the suffering from this awful disease.”

Alopecia areata is an autoimmune disorder in which the body’s immune system attacks hair follicles, and which typically occurs in people under the age of 40. At present there is no FDA-approved treatment for the disease.

To test the drug, the researchers conducted two large, randomised trials involving a total of 1 200 people. The participants were adults with severe alopecia areata, who had lost at least half of their scalp hair.

For 36 weeks, participants were randomised to either a daily dose of either 4mg of baricitinib, 2mg of baricitinib, or a placebo. One-third of the patients who received the larger dose grew hair back.

According to the researchers, baricitinib works by disrupting the communication of immune cells involved in harming hair follicles. Baricitinib and other JAK inhibitors are routinely used to treat autoimmune forms of joint disease.

“Alopecia areata is a crazy journey, marked by chaos, confusion, and profound sadness for many who suffer from it,” King said. “It will be incredible to have a medicine to help people emerge on the other side, normalcy restored, recognizable again to themselves and those around them.”

Over the past decade, A/Prof King has developed methods for using JAK inhibitors to treat a variety of skin diseases — including eczema, vitiligo, granuloma annulare, sarcoidosis, and erosive lichen planus.

A/Prof King noted that the clinical trials involving baricitinib are ongoing, allowing researchers to assess the long-term effectiveness and safety of the treatment.

Source: Yale University

Severe COVID and Male Balding Gene Linked

Photo by Brett Sayles from Pexels

While COVID has been long known to be more dangerous in men than women, research which is still in its early stages shows that some of this increased risk could be from having a gene for male balding. 

A team of researchers in the US first suspected the link when they noticed that men with a common form of hormone-sensitive hair loss, known as androgenetic alopecia, were also more likely to be hospitalised with COVID.  They presented their findings May 6 at the virtual spring meeting of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (EADV).

“Among hospitalized men with COVID-19, 79% presented with androgenetic alopecia compared to 31%-53% that would be expected in a similar aged match population,” said researchers led by Dr Andy Goren, chief medical officer at Applied Biology Inc in California. 

The researchers noted that androgenetic alopecia is due to the activity of the androgen receptor (AR) gene, which can lead to balding in some men. An enzyme called TMPRSS2, key to COVID infection, is also androgen-sensitive, and might be affected by the AR gene as well, explained Dr Goren’s group.

One key segment on the AR gene seems to affect both COVID severity and male balding.

In the new study, the Irvine group enrolled 65 men hospitalised with COVID, and conducted a genetic analysis on them. The results showed that participants with certain structural differences in the AR gene were at greater risk of developing severe COVID. Speaking in a meeting press release, Goren said the AR gene anomaly “could be used as a biomarker to help identify male COVID-19 patients most at risk for ICU admissions.”

He added that he believes that “the identification of a biomarker connected with the androgen receptor is another piece of evidence highlighting the important role of androgens [male hormones] in COVID-19 disease severity.”

Dr Teresa Murray Amato  has seen many severe cases of COVID. She is chair of emergency medicine at Long Island Jewish Forest Hills in New York City. Though not connected to the new research, but said it “did show a significant correlation between a higher number of androgen receptors and a higher incidence of ICU admissions for patients infected with COVID-19.”

Dr Amato added that, “While the study is small and the exact association is not completely understood, it may show at least one answer to why men were more likely to be admitted to ICU and have overall higher morality with COVID-19 infections.”

According to Amato, further investigations are necessary to determine whether “medications that block androgen receptors will be useful in treating a subset of [COVID-19] patients.”

Since the findings were presented at a medical meeting, they should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

Source: Medical Xpress

Donated Afro Hair Wigs Now Possible Thanks to UK Girl

A silhouetted woman with afro hair reading a book by a window. Photo by Thought Catalog from Pexels

A British girl who was told her afro hair was too delicate to donate for wig-making prompted a new wig-making approach to use it, BBC News reports.

When eleven year old Carly Gorton wanted to donate her afro hair to the Little Princess Trust charity, which makes natural hair wigs for children who have lost theirs from cancer treatment and other causes, she was initially frustrated as the charity said the hair was too delicate. Undeterred, Carly had urged the charity to rethink, which it did.

Following research and a trial to make them possible, the charity described the new wigs as a “historic breakthrough”.

“It’s really beautiful,” said Carly, of one of the new wigs.

A BMJ study showed that wigs positively impact psychological wellbeing for people with alopecia, attributed to increasing their confidence of going out in public and the perception of fewer comments about hair loss.

At a special school assembly, Carly’s mother Anna Mudeka then cut her daughter’s hair and it was donated for use in the first new wigs to be worn by other children.

Phil Brace, The Little Princess Trust’s chief executive, said Carly’s “determination” to donate her hair had pushed them to find a solution.

The charity worked with the 120-year-old London company Raoul to develop a wefting method to weave and tie the donated locks.

Carly’s mother, Anna Mudeka, said: “History has been made and we are so proud of Carly.

“Through her sheer determination and everyone pulling together to hear her voice, children of black and mixed heritage can now donate their hair to the Little Princess Trust.”

Ms Mudeka, of Southburgh, added that children needing wigs through illness could now receive a wig “true to their heritage”.

Carly and her mother’s campaign had created a “fundamental change in wig manufacturing”, said Mr Brace. “The commitment and work that has gone on has shown just what is possible when groups of people get together and bring different skills to find a solution.”

Source: BBC News