1. Real-world health outcomes in US adult patients with mild to moderate plaque psoriasis taking topical therapy.
- Author
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Kaplan, David, Hetherington, James, Lucas, James, Khilfeh, Ibrahim, and Nazareth, Tara
- Subjects
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PSORIASIS , *BODY surface area , *ADULTS , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *ITCHING - Abstract
Limited health outcomes information exists for patients with mild to moderate plaque psoriasis (hereafter, referred to as psoriasis) prescribed topical treatment(s). We evaluated clinical characteristics of patients with systemic-naïve mild to moderate psoriasis after topical use in the United States. Data were drawn from 2017 to 2018 Adelphi Psoriasis Disease Specific Programme™, a point-in-time survey of physicians and adult psoriasis patients, capturing data on topical treatment at time of consultation prescribed to systemic-naïve patients with mild to moderate psoriasis (i.e. body surface area [BSA] ≤ 10%) at current treatment initiation. Patient clinical characteristics before/after topical use were evaluated descriptively. Among 304 patients (median age 43.0 years; 53.6% female), mean time since diagnosis was 60.9 months. After a mean 6.9 months on their current topical, 14.5% of patients achieved ≥75% BSA reduction, 38.9% ≥50% BSA reduction, and 50.2% no BSA reduction. Residual psoriasis symptoms included scaling (76.5%), inflamed skin (65.9%), and itching (60.4%). Most patients (71.2%) had residual psoriasis in special body areas: nails (92.3%), palmoplantar (78.9%), scalp (75.9%), and face (65.8%). We found unmet need in topical treatment effectiveness in mild to moderate psoriasis patients, in terms of BSA reduction, symptoms, and special body areas affected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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