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Recent
Articles
Oliver SJ, Kikuchi T, Krueger JG, Kaplan G.
Thalidomide induces granuloma differentiation in sarcoid
skin lesions associated with disease improvement.
Clin Immunol 2002 Mar;102(3):225-36
PMID: 11890709
Sarcoidosis, a chronic granulomatous disease of unknown etiology,
is treated
with immune suppressive drugs such as corticosteroids. Sarcoidosis
patients have
been reported to benefit clinically from treatment with thalidomide.
We
administered thalidomide for 16 weeks to eight patients with chronic
skin
sarcoidosis and evaluated the drug's effects before and with treatment.
After
thalidomide treatment, all skin biopsies showed decreases in granuloma
size and
reduction in epidermal thickness. We also observed extensive T cell
recruitment
into the granulomas, the appearance of multinucleated giant cells,
and increased
numbers of dermal Langerhans cells (CD1a(+)) and mature dendritic
cells (CD83(+)
or DC-LAMP(+)). Plasma IL-12 levels increased and remained elevated
during the
treatment period. We noted increased HLA-DR expression on peripheral
blood
lymphocytes and a corresponding drop in the naive T cell marker
CD45RA. Our data
suggest that thalidomide treatment of sarcoidosis results in granuloma
differentiation to a Th1-type cellular immune response usually associated
with
protective immunity to tuberculosis and tuberculoid leprosy.

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