Beyond pigmentation: signs of liver protection during afamelanotide treatment in Swiss patients with erythropoietic protoporphyria, an observational study

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Abstract

Erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP) is an ultra-rare inherited disorder with overproduction of protoporphyrin in maturating erythroblasts. This excess protoporphyrin leads to incapacitating phototoxic burns in sunlight exposed skin. Its biliary elimination causes cholestatic liver injury in 20% and terminal liver failure in 4% of EPP patients. Thereby, the risk of liver injury increases with increasing erythrocyte protoporphyrin concentrations. Afamelanotide, an α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) analog inducing skin pigmentation, was shown to improve sunlight tolerance in EPP. Beyond this well-known effect on pigmentation, the MSHs have liver-protective effects and improve survival of maturating erythroblasts, effects described in animal or in vitro models to date only. We investigated whether afamelanotide treatment in EPP has effects on erythropoiesis, protoporphyrin concentrations, and liver injury by analyzing retrospectively our long-term safety data. Methods: From the 47 Swiss EPP-patients treated at our center since 2006, we included those 38 patients in the current analysis who received at least one afamelanotide dose between 2016 and 2018 and underwent regular laboratory testing before and during the treatment. We compared the means of pretreatment measurements with those during the treatment. Results: Protoporphyrin concentrations dropped from 21.39 ± 11.12 (mean ± SD) before afamelanotide to 16.83 ± 8.24 µmol/L (p

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Minder, A. E., Barman-Aksoezen, J., Schmid, M., Minder, E. I., Zulewski, H., Minder, C. E., & Schneider-Yin, X. (2021). Beyond pigmentation: signs of liver protection during afamelanotide treatment in Swiss patients with erythropoietic protoporphyria, an observational study. Therapeutic Advances in Rare Disease, 2. https://doi.org/10.1177/26330040211065453

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