Nano‐encapsulated anandamide reduces inflammatory cytokines in vitro and lesion severity in a murine model of cutaneous lupus erythematosus

Experimental Dermatology
Open Access

Clinical Summary

View source

What was studied

Topical nano‑encapsulated anandamide (AEA‑NP) was tested in vitro in UVB‑stimulated keratinocytes and in vivo in MRL‑lpr mice with cutaneous lupus, comparing AEA‑NP to unencapsulated AEA and no treatment, with twice‑weekly dosing for 10 weeks; a small BALB/c study assessed skin penetration and follicular persistence.

Key findings

AEA‑NP reduced IL‑6 and MCP‑1 in UVB‑stimulated keratinocytes (p<0.05) and improved cutaneous penetration with follicular persistence at 24 h in BALB/c skin. In MRL‑lpr mice, AEA‑NP decreased clinical and histologic lesion scores versus unencapsulated AEA and untreated controls (multiple adjusted p<0.05 across weeks 3–10); prophylactic AEA‑NP lowered plaque scores versus untreated (mean difference 7.33, p=0.0017) and control‑treated (mean difference 3.786, p=0.0132), and reduced C3 and IBA‑1 in lesional tissue (p<0.05).

Study limitations

Findings are preclinical (keratinocyte assays and murine models) with no human data. Efficacy cohort sizes in MRL‑lpr experiments were not reported; the penetration study used n=3 BALB/c mice.

Clinical implications

AEA‑NP shows anti‑inflammatory activity and lowers lesion scores in a murine model of cutaneous lupus, with better skin penetration than unencapsulated AEA; this supports proceeding to human studies but is not yet practice‑changing.