Plaque Psoriasis Management

Posted by: admin on: February 6, 2012

The National Psoriasis Foundation Medical Board reviewed and updated the Canadian Guidelines for the Management of Plaque Psoriasis to include new treatments such as ustekinumab and excimer laser, according to a Consensus Statement published in the January issue of the Archives of Dermatology.

-Team@CMHF

  • The manifestations of psoriasis can be severe and widespread with signs and symptoms that greatly affect the patients’ quality of life.
  • Psoriatic arthritis, which can be severe and debilitating, is also present in many patients.
  • Finally, psoriasis is associated with an increased risk of serious comorbidities, such as cardiovascular disease and the metabolic syndrome that complicate management and increase the risk of early death.
  • The new recommendations cover management of psoriasis in special populations, including children, pregnant women with psoriasis, pregnant partners of patients with psoriasis, nursing mothers, the elderly, patients infected with hepatitis B or C virus or with HIV, and patients with malignant neoplasms.
  • Treatments covered in the guidelines include newly approved biological agents such as ustekinumab; the excimer laser, which is approved for psoriasis treatment in the United States; and tumor necrosis factor (TNF) blockers.
  • The consensus statement also describes management of psoriasis therapies in conjunction with elective surgery and vaccinations.
  • Drugs used in management of psoriasis include the following:
    1. Etanercept, a TNF inhibitor, is often used as a first-line systemic drug for chronic plaque psoriasis
    2. Ustekinumab, a monoclonal antibody that binds the shared p40 protein subunit of interleukin (IL) 12 and IL-23, which has efficacy and safety comparable to those of etanercept and may be used as first-line systemic treatment for chronic plaque psoriasis
    3. Adalimumab, a TNF inhibitor, which may be used as first-line systemic treatment of plaque psoriasis and is more effective and has a lower rate of adverse effects than methotrexate
    4. Cyclosporine, a fast-acting systemic oral calcineurin inhibitor, which is often used as a first-line therapy for von Zumbusch for pustular psoriasis or erythrodermic psoriasis, and may also be used intermittently for up to 12 weeks to control a psoriasis flare
    5. Methotrexate, a sodium inhibitor of folate biosynthesis, which may be used as a first-line systemic drug for plaque psoriasis and is somewhat less effective than cyclosporine, but may be used continuously for decades if needed;
    6. Alefacept, which triggers the death of pathogenic T lymphocytes and may be used intermittently; although there is little evidence to support its use to achieve full clearance, it is often used in combination regimens and may be used as a first-line systemic drug for chronic plaque psoriasis;
    7. Infliximab, an intravenously administered TNF inhibitor, which is often used as a second- or third-line biological for chronic plaque psoriasis
    8. Acitretin, an oral retinoid, which is used as first-line systemic therapy for chronic palmoplantar or pustular psoriasis in patients of non-childbearing potential; however, it is of limited benefit for plaque psoriasis.
  • Ultraviolet (UV) light therapies include narrowband UV-B and psoralen-UV-A, which are effective and rapidly deplete cell populations implicated in psoriasis pathogenesis.
  • However, adverse effects may include erythema, blistering, skin aging, and risk for carcinogenesis.
  • The excimer laser emits monochromatic 308-nm radiation, which is similarly effective to those of narrowband UV-B, but with fewer adverse effects (erythema and transient hyperpigmentation). Exposure can be restricted to psoriatic skin.
  • Advances in psoriasis research continue to yield new approaches that promise ever more control of plaque psoriasis
  • The developments may well revolutionize care in coming years; however they are unlikely to change the fundamental need for active engagement with the patient to ensure that the selected treatment is used appropriately.

For further reading log on to
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/757223

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