AI Article Synopsis

  • Dupuytren's disease is a fibroproliferative condition that leads to serious hand deformities and currently relies on limited treatments that often only provide partial relief.
  • *The study emphasizes the need for a deeper understanding of the disease's systemic factors, like cytokines and growth factors, to improve treatment options and disease management.
  • *By identifying specific biomarkers linked to Dupuytren's disease, researchers hope to enhance diagnosis, monitor treatment responses, and potentially find new therapies that can also apply to other fibrotic disorders.*

Article Abstract

Dupuytren's disease is a common fibroproliferative disease that can result in debilitating hand deformities. Partial correction and return of deformity are common with surgical or clinical treatments at present. While current treatments are limited to local procedures for relatively late effects of the disease, the pathophysiology of this connective tissue disorder is associated with both local and systemic processes (e.g., fibrosis, inflammation). Hence, a better understanding of the systemic circulation of Dupuytren related cytokines and growth factors may provide important insights into disease progression. In addition, systemic biomarker analysis could yield new concepts for treatments of Dupuytren that attenuate circulatory factors (e.g., anti-inflammatory agents, neutralizing antibodies). Progress in the development of any disease modifying biologic treatment for Dupuytren has been hampered by the lack of clinically useful biomarkers. The characterization of nonsurgical Dupuytren biomarkers will permit disease staging from diagnostic and prognostic perspectives, as well as allows evaluation of biologic responses to treatment. Identification of such markers may transcend their use in Dupuytren treatment, because fibrotic biological processes fundamental to Dupuytren are relevant to fibrosis in many other connective tissues and organs with collagen-based tissue compartments. There is a wide range of potential Dupuytren biomarker categories that could be informative, including disease determinants linked to genetics, collagen metabolism, as well as immunity and inflammation (e.g., cytokines, chemokines). This narrative review provides a broad overview of previous studies and emphasizes the importance of inflammatory mediators as candidate circulating biomarkers for monitoring Dupuytren's disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1615/CritRevEukaryotGeneExpr.2024052889DOI Listing

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