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Dive into the research topics where Ulrich Mrowietz is active.

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Featured researches published by Ulrich Mrowietz.


Journal of The European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology | 2009

European S3‐Guidelines on the systemic treatment of psoriasis vulgaris

Delano Pathirana; A.D. Ormerod; P Saiag; Catherine Smith; Phyllis I. Spuls; Alexander Nast; Jonathan Barker; Jd Bos; Gr Burmester; Sergio Chimenti; Louis Dubertret; Bernadette Eberlein; Ricardo Erdmann; J Ferguson; Giampiero Girolomoni; Paolo Gisondi; A Giunta; C.E.M. Griffiths; H. Hönigsmann; Munther Hussain; R Jobling; Sl Karvonen; Lajos Kemény; Ina Kopp; Craig L. Leonardi; Mara Maccarone; Alan Menter; Ulrich Mrowietz; Luigi Naldi; Tamar Nijsten

Of the 131 studies on monotherapy or combination therapy assessed, 56 studies on the different forms of phototherapy fulfilled the criteria for inclusion in the guidelines. Approximately three-quarters of all patients treated with phototherapy attained at least a PASI 75 response after 4 to 6 weeks, and clearance was frequently achieved (levels of evidence 2 and 3). Phototherapy represents a safe and very effective treatment option for moderate to severe forms of psoriasis vulgaris. The onset of clinical effects occurs within 2 weeks. Of the unwanted side effects, UV erythema from overexposure is by far the most common and is observed frequently. With repeated or long-term use, the consequences of high, cumulative UV doses (such as premature aging of the skin) must be taken into consideration. In addition, carcinogenic risk is associated with oral PUVA and is probable for local PUVA and UVB. The practicability of the therapy is limited by spatial, financial, human, and time constraints on the part of the physician, as well as by the amount of time required by the patient. From the perspective of the cost-bearing institution, phototherapy has a good cost-benefit ratio. However, the potentially significant costs for, and time required of, the patient must be considered.


Nature Medicine | 2003

Interleukin-4 therapy of psoriasis induces Th2 responses and improves human autoimmune disease

Kamran Ghoreschi; Peter Thomas; Susanne Breit; Martin Dugas; Reinhard Mailhammer; Willem van Eden; Ruurd van der Zee; Tilo Biedermann; Jörg C. Prinz; Matthias Mack; Ulrich Mrowietz; Enno Christophers; Detlef Schlöndorff; Gerd Plewig; Christian A. Sander; Martin Röcken

Selective skewing of autoreactive interferon-γ (IFN-γ)-producing T helper cells (Th1) toward an interleukin-4 (IL-4)-producing (Th2) phenotype can in experimental animals alleviate autoimmune disease without inducing general immunosuppression. In a prospective dose escalation study, we assessed treatment with human IL-4 (rhuIL-4) in 20 patients with severe psoriasis. The therapy was well tolerated, and within six weeks all patients showed decreased clinical scores and 15 improved more than 68%. Stable reduction of clinical scores was significantly better at 0.2–0.5 μg rhuIL-4 than at ≤0.1 μg rhuIL-4 (P = 0.009). In psoriatic lesions, treatment with 0.2–0.5 μg/kg rhuIL-4 reduced the concentrations of IL-8 and IL-19, two cytokines directly involved in psoriasis; the number of chemokine receptor CCR5+ Th1 cells; and the IFN-γ/IL-4 ratio. In the circulation, 0.2–0.5 μg/kg rhuIL-4 increased the number of IL-4+CD4+ T cells two- to three-fold. Thus, IL-4 therapy can induce Th2 differentiation in human CD4+ T cells and has promise as a potential treatment for psoriasis, a prototypic Th1-associated autoimmune disease.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Genome-wide association study identifies a psoriasis susceptibility locus at TRAF3IP2.

Eva Ellinghaus; David Ellinghaus; Philip E. Stuart; Rajan P. Nair; Sophie Debrus; John V. Raelson; Majid Belouchi; Helene Fournier; Claudia Reinhard; Jun Ding; Yun Li; Trilokraj Tejasvi; Johann E. Gudjonsson; Stefan W. Stoll; John J. Voorhees; Sylviane Lambert; Stephan Weidinger; Bernadette Eberlein; Manfred Kunz; Proton Rahman; Dafna D. Gladman; Christian Gieger; H.-Erich Wichmann; Tom H. Karlsen; Gabriele Mayr; Mario Albrecht; Dieter Kabelitz; Ulrich Mrowietz; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; James T. Elder

Psoriasis is a multifactorial skin disease characterized by epidermal hyperproliferation and chronic inflammation, the most common form of which is psoriasis vulgaris (PsV). We present a genome-wide association analysis of 2,339,118 SNPs in 472 PsV cases and 1,146 controls from Germany, with follow-up of the 147 most significant SNPs in 2,746 PsV cases and 4,140 controls from three independent replication panels. We identified an association at TRAF3IP2 on 6q21 and genotyped two SNPs at this locus in two additional replication panels (the combined discovery and replication panels consisted of 6,487 cases and 8,037 controls; combined P = 2.36 × 10−10 for rs13210247 and combined P = 1.24 × 10−16 for rs33980500). About 15% of psoriasis cases develop psoriatic arthritis (PsA). A stratified analysis of our datasets including only PsA cases (1,922 cases compared to 8,037 controls, P = 4.57 × 10−12 for rs33980500) suggested that TRAF3IP2 represents a shared susceptibility for PsV and PsA. TRAF3IP2 encodes a protein involved in IL-17 signaling and which interacts with members of the Rel/NF-κB transcription factor family.


Archives of Dermatological Research | 2006

Quality of life of patients with keloid and hypertrophic scarring

Oliver Bock; Gerhard Schmid-Ott; Peter Malewski; Ulrich Mrowietz

Keloid and hypertrophic scarring represent chronic disfiguring dermatoses with a high resistance to therapy. The aim of our study was to assess for the first time the quality of life of patients with hypertrophic scars and keloids, because they suffer from quality of life impairment as much as patients with other chronic skin diseases. An item-pool was created modifying and supplementing the items of the Questionnaire on Experience with Skin Complaints. This questionnaire was distributed to 100 outpatients with keloids and hypertrophic scars. A factor analysis was used to identify the underlying dimensions. Two scales (psychological and physical impairment) of the questionnaire with nine and five items, respectively, were established. Test–retest reliability of the questionnaire was excellent (corr>0.9). Good validity was suggested by the correlation of physical impairment with pain (P≤0.001), pruritus (P<0.001), and the amount of restriction of mobility (P<0.001). The psychological scale was associated with pain and restriction of mobility, although the correlations were lower. This study demonstrates for the first time an impairment of quality of life in a large group of patients with keloid and hypertrophic scarring.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Genome-wide association analysis identifies three psoriasis susceptibility loci

Philip E. Stuart; Rajan P. Nair; Eva Ellinghaus; Jun Ding; Trilokraj Tejasvi; Johann E. Gudjonsson; Yun Li; Stephan Weidinger; Bernadette Eberlein; Christian Gieger; H.-Erich Wichmann; Manfred Kunz; Robert W. Ike; Gerald G. Krueger; Anne M. Bowcock; Ulrich Mrowietz; Henry W. Lim; John J. Voorhees; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Michael Weichenthal; Andre Franke; Proton Rahman; Dafna D. Gladman; James T. Elder

We carried out a meta-analysis of two recent psoriasis genome-wide association studies with a combined discovery sample of 1,831 affected individuals (cases) and 2,546 controls. One hundred and two loci selected based on P value rankings were followed up in a three-stage replication study including 4,064 cases and 4,685 controls from Michigan, Toronto, Newfoundland and Germany. In the combined meta-analysis, we identified three new susceptibility loci, including one at NOS2 (rs4795067, combined P = 4 × 10−11), one at FBXL19 (rs10782001, combined P = 9 × 10−10) and one near PSMA6-NFKBIA (rs12586317, combined P = 2 × 10−8). All three loci were also associated with psoriatic arthritis (rs4795067, combined P = 1 × 10−5; rs10782001, combined P = 4 × 10−8; and rs12586317, combined P = 6 × 10−5) and purely cutaneous psoriasis (rs4795067, combined P = 1 × 10−8; rs10782001, combined P = 2 × 10−6; and rs12586317, combined P = 1 × 10−6). We also replicated a recently identified association signal near RNF114 (rs495337, combined P = 2 × 10−7).


British Journal of Dermatology | 2006

European patient perspectives on the impact of psoriasis: the EUROPSO patient membership survey

Louis Dubertret; Ulrich Mrowietz; Annamari Ranki; P.C.M. van de Kerkhof; Sergio Chimenti; T. Lotti; G. Schafer

Background  EUROPSO (European Federation of Psoriasis Patient Associations) undertook a Europe‐wide survey examining quality of life and patients’ perspectives on treatment and their disease.


Journal Der Deutschen Dermatologischen Gesellschaft | 2012

S3 – Guidelines on the treatment of psoriasis vulgaris (English version). Update

Alexander Nast; Wolf-Henning Boehncke; Ulrich Mrowietz; Hans-Michael Ockenfels; Sandra Philipp; Kristian Reich; Thomas Rosenbach; Adel Sammain; Martin Schlaeger; Michael Sebastian; Wolfram Sterry; Volker Streit; Matthias Augustin; Ricardo Erdmann; Joachim Klaus; Joachim Koza; Siegrid Muller; Hans-Dieter Orzechowski; Stefanie Rosumeck; Gerhard Schmid-Ott; Tobias Weberschock; Berthold Rzany

Psoriasis vulgaris is a common and often chronic inflammatory skin disease. The incidence of psoriasis in Western industrialized countries ranges from 1.5% to 2%. Patients afflicted with severe psoriasis vulgaris may experience a significant reduction in quality of life. Despite the large variety of treatment options available, surveys have shown that patients still do not received optimal treatments. To optimize the treatment of psoriasis in Germany, the Deutsche Dermatologi sche Gesellschaft (DDG) and the Berufsverband Deutscher Dermatologen (BVDD) have initiated a project to develop evidence‐based guidelines for the management of psoriasis. They were first published in 2006 and updated in 2011. The Guidelines focus on induction therapy in cases of mild, moderate and severe plaque‐type psoriasis in adults including systemic therapy, UV therapy and topical therapies.


Journal of Neuroinflammation | 2010

Dimethylfumarate inhibits microglial and astrocytic inflammation by suppressing the synthesis of nitric oxide, IL-1β, TNF-α and IL-6 in an in-vitro model of brain inflammation

Henrik Wilms; Jobst Sievers; Uta Rickert; Martin Rostami-Yazdi; Ulrich Mrowietz; Ralph Lucius

BackgroundBrain inflammation plays a central role in multiple sclerosis (MS). Dimethylfumarate (DMF), the main ingredient of an oral formulation of fumaric acid esters with proven therapeutic efficacy in psoriasis, has recently been found to ameliorate the course of relapsing-remitting MS. Glial cells are the effector cells of neuroinflammation; however, little is known of the effect of DMF on microglia and astrocytes. The purpose of this study was to use an established in vitro model of brain inflammation to determine if DMF modulates the release of neurotoxic molecules from microglia and astrocytes, thus inhibiting glial inflammation.MethodsPrimary microglial and astrocytic cell cultures were prepared from cerebral cortices of neonatal rats. The control cells were treated with LPS, an accepted inducer of pro-inflammatory properties in glial cells, and the experimental groups with LPS and DMF in different concentrations. After stimulation/incubation, the generation of nitric oxide (NO) in the cell culture supernatants was determined by measuring nitrite accumulation in the medium using Griess reagent. After 6 hours of treatment RT-PCR was used to determine transcription levels of iNOS, IL-1β, IL-6 and TNF-α mRNA in microglial and astrocytic cell cultures initially treated with DMF, followed after 30 min by LPS treatment. Moreover, we investigated possible involvement of the ERK and Nrf-2 transduction pathway in microglia using western blot analysis.ResultsPretreatment with DMF decreased synthesis of the proinflammatory mediators iNOS, TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-6 at the RNA level in activated microglia and astrocytes in vitro, associated with a decrease in ERK phosphorylation in microglia.ConclusionsCollectively, these results suggest that the neuroprotective effects of DMF may be in part functionally attributable to the compounds ability to inhibit expression of multiple neuroinflammatory mediators in brain of MS patients.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 2012

Adalimumab for the Treatment of Moderate to Severe Hidradenitis Suppurativa: A Parallel Randomized Trial

Alexa B. Kimball; Francisco A. Kerdel; David Adams; Ulrich Mrowietz; Joel M. Gelfand; Robert Gniadecki; Errol P. Prens; Joel Schlessinger; Christos C. Zouboulis; Hessel H. van der Zee; Marie R. Rosenfeld; Parvez Mulani; Yihua Gu; Susan K. Paulson; Martin M. Okun; Gregor B. E. Jemec

BACKGROUND Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a chronic, painful skin disease characterized by abscesses, nodules, and draining fistulas in the axilla and groin of young adults. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the efficacy and safety of adalimumab, an anti-tumor necrosis factor-α antibody, in patients with moderate to severe HS. DESIGN Phase 2, parallel, randomized, placebo-controlled trial consisting of a blinded 16-week period (period 1) and an open-label 36-week period (period 2). All study personnel, investigators, and patients remained blinded to treatment group throughout the study. (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00918255) SETTING 26 academic and private practice medical centers in the United States and Europe. PATIENTS 154 adult patients with moderate to severe HS who were unresponsive or intolerant to oral antibiotics. INTERVENTION Patients were assigned in a 1:1:1 ratio to adalimumab, 40 mg/wk; adalimumab, 40 mg every other week (EOW); or placebo. All patients received adalimumab, 40 mg EOW, at the beginning of period 2 but switched to weekly dosing if the response was suboptimal (HS Physicians Global Assessment [PGA] score of moderate or worse) at weeks 28 or 31. MEASUREMENTS The primary outcome measure (clinical response) was the proportion of patients achieving an HS-PGA score of clear, minimal, or mild with at least a 2-grade improvement relative to baseline at week 16. RESULTS At week 16, 3.9% of placebo patients (2 of 51), 9.6% of EOW patients (5 of 52), and 17.6% of weekly patients (9 of 51) achieved clinical response (EOW vs. placebo strata-adjusted difference, 5.6% [95% CI, -4.0% to 15.3%]; P = 0.25; weekly vs. placebo strata-adjusted difference, 13.7% [CI, 1.7% to 25.7%]; P = 0.025). Serious adverse event rates were 3.9%, 5.8%, and 7.8% for placebo, EOW, and weekly patients, respectively (EOW vs. placebo difference, 1.8% [CI, -6.4% to 10.1%]; weekly vs. placebo difference, 3.9% [CI, -5.2% to 13.0%]). Significantly greater improvements in patient-reported outcomes and pain were seen in the weekly dosing group than in the placebo group. A decrease in response was seen after the switch from weekly to EOW dosing in period 2. LIMITATIONS Weeks 16 to 52 of the study were open-label. The study was not powered to assess the risk for known serious adverse effects of adalimumab, such as tuberculosis, other serious infections, and demyelinating disorders. CONCLUSION Adalimumab dosed once per week alleviates moderate to severe HS. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE Abbott Laboratories.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2010

Enhanced expression and secretion of antimicrobial peptides in atopic dermatitis and after superficial skin injury.

Jürgen Harder; Stefanie Dressel; Maike Wittersheim; Jesko Cordes; Ulf Meyer-Hoffert; Ulrich Mrowietz; Regina Fölster-Holst; Ehrhard Proksch; Jens-Michael Schröder; T. Schwarz; Regine Gläser

Human skin can defend itself against potentially invading microorganisms by production of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs). The expression of AMPs in atopic dermatitis (AD) is still emerging. To gain more insight into the role of AMPs in AD, we systematically analyzed the expression of ribonuclease 7 (RNase 7), psoriasin, and human beta-defensins (hBD)-2 and -3 in AD compared with psoriatic and healthy control skin as well as after experimental barrier disruption. Immunostaining revealed enhanced expression of all AMPs in the lesional skin of untreated AD and psoriasis when compared with non-lesional skin and controls. Accordingly, induced in vivo secretion of RNase 7, psoriasin, and hBD-2 was detected using ELISA on lesional skin in AD and in even higher concentrations in psoriasis. The secretion of AMPs did not correlate with severity of AD and Staphylococcus aureus colonization. Skin barrier disruption caused enhanced immunoreactivity of hBD-2 and hBD-3 after 24 hours. Strong secretion of RNase 7 was already detected after 1 hour, whereas hBD-2 secretion was significantly enhanced after 24 hours only under occlusion. Thus, a disturbed skin barrier may trigger AMP induction in AD and psoriasis. The functional role of AMP in AD, especially with regard to the control of S. aureus colonization, needs further analysis.

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Kristian Reich

University of Göttingen

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Alexander Nast

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Thomas Rosenbach

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Wolfram Sterry

Humboldt State University

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K. Reich

University of Manchester

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