Affiliation:
1. Department of Dermatology Teikyo University Tokyo Japan
2. Department of Dermatology Jichi Medical University Tochigi Japan
3. Department of Dermatology Tokyo Medical University Tokyo Japan
4. Tyk2 and Immunology Medical, Bristol Myers Squibb K.K. Tokyo Japan
5. Department of Geriatric and Environmental Dermatology Nagoya City University Graduate School of Medical Sciences Nagoya Japan
Abstract
AbstractPlaque psoriasis (PsO) is a chronic immune‐mediated inflammatory disease with skin lesions accompanied by an inflammation‐related comorbidity risk. The development of various oral drugs and biologics for PsO has provided increasing systemic treatment options for patients with PsO, and the guidance regarding the use of biologics and PsO treatment schemes are widespread in Japan. However, no comprehensive guidelines regarding systemic drug use are available, and the current treatment patterns of systemic drugs for PsO in Japan remain unclear. We conducted a retrospective chart review to clarify the current treatment patterns of systemic drugs for PsO. We enrolled 114 patients who started systemic drugs for PsO between January 2017 and December 2020 at four institutes, with a mean follow‐up of 37.2 months. The mean disease duration was 7.8 (standard deviation 9.5) years at the systemic drug initiation. Of all the patients, 78.1% started with oral drugs (phosphodiesterase [PDE] 4 inhibitors 56.1%. calcineurin inhibitors 14.0%. vitamin A derivatives 7.9%), whereas 21.9% started with biologics (interleukin [IL]‐17 inhibitors 9.6%. tumor necrosis factor inhibitors 7.0%. IL‐23 inhibitors 3.5%. IL‐12/23 inhibitors 1.8%). Oral drugs had shorter drug persistence than biologics: the 12‐month persistence of the oral drugs vitamin A derivative, calcineurin inhibitor, and PDE4 inhibitor, was 35.5%, 25.8%, and 60.1%, respectively, compared with that of the biologics IL‐23 and IL‐17 inhibitors, which was 85.6% and 84.7%, respectively. During the study period, the incidence of treatment changes was 59.1/100 patient‐years. Lack of efficacy was the most common reason for treatment changes from monotherapy (34.1%). This retrospective medical chart review allowed us to understand the real‐world, long‐term treatment patterns of systemic drugs for PsO and the relationships between the reasons for treatment changes and subsequent treatment selection, indicating that there is still room for improvement in the appropriate use of systemic drugs for PsO in Japan.
Subject
Dermatology,General Medicine