Survival rates of systemic interventions for psoriasis in the Western Japan Psoriasis Registry: A multicenter retrospective study

Author:

Yanase Tetsuji1ORCID,Tsuruta Noriko23ORCID,Yamaguchi Kazuki24,Ohata Chika56ORCID,Ohyama Bungo57,Katayama Eri5,Sugita Kazunari89,Kuwashiro Maki8,Hashimoto Aki8,Yonekura Kentaro10ORCID,Higashi Yuko11ORCID,Murota Hiroyuki12ORCID,Koike Yuta12ORCID,Matsuzaka Yuki13,Kikuchi Satoko14,Hatano Yutaka15ORCID,Saito Kanami15,Takahashi Kenzo16,Miyagi Takuya16ORCID,Kaneko Sakae1718ORCID,Ota Masataka17ORCID,Harada Kayo19,Morizane Shin20ORCID,Ikeda Kenta20ORCID,Furue Masutaka21,Nakahara Takeshi21ORCID,Okazaki Fusako22,Sasaki Natsuko23ORCID,Okada Etsuko23ORCID,Yoshida Yuichi9,Ito Kotaro224,Imafuku Shinichi2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dermatology Hiroshima City North Medical Center Asa Citizens Hospital Hiroshima Japan

2. Department of Dermatology Fukuoka University Faculty of Medicine Fukuoka Japan

3. Department of Dermatology Kitakyuhsu City Yahata Hospital Kitakyushu Japan

4. Department of Dermatology Saiseikai Futsukaichi Hospital Fukuoka Japan

5. Department of Dermatology Kurume University School of Medicine Kurume Japan

6. Department of Dermatology Osaka General Medical Center Osaka Japan

7. Ohyama Dermatology Clinic Kumamoto Japan

8. Division of Dermatology, Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine Saga University Saga Japan

9. Division of Dermatology, Department of Medicine of Sensory and Motor Organs Tottori University Faculty of Medicine Yonago Japan

10. Department of Dermatology Imamura General Hospital Kagoshima Japan

11. Department of Dermatology Kagoshima University Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences Kagoshima Japan

12. Department of Dermatology Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences Nagasaki Japan

13. Department of Dermatology Onomichi General Hospital Onomichi Japan

14. Department of Dermatology Kyushu Central Hospital Fukuoka Japan

15. Department of Dermatology, Faculty of Medicine Oita University Yufu Japan

16. Department of Dermatology Graduate School of Medicine University of the Ryukyus Nishihara Japan

17. Department of Dermatology Shimane University Faculty of Medicine Izumo Japan

18. Department of Dermatology Masuda Red Cross Hospital Masuda Japan

19. Department of Dermatology and Allergy National Hospital Organization, Kyushu Medical Center Fukuoka Japan

20. Department of Dermatology Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences Okayama Japan

21. Department of Dermatology, Graduate School of Medical Sciences Kyushu University Fukuoka Japan

22. Department of Dermatology Okayama City General Medicine Center Okayama Japan

23. Department of Dermatology University of Occupational and Environmental Health Kitakyushu Japan

24. Ito Medical Clinic, Dermatology Kitsuki Japan

Abstract

AbstractPsoriasis affects approximately 0.3% of the Japanese population. Recently, various effective systemic drugs have become available, and the continuation of a given treatment has become critical because of the chronic nature of psoriasis. Factors affecting drug survival (the time until treatment discontinuation) in psoriasis treatment include efficacy, safety, ease of use, and patient preference. In the present study, the authors retrospectively surveyed a multifacility patient registry to determine the real‐world evidence of the survival rate of systemic interventions for psoriasis treatment. Patients with psoriasis who visited 20 facilities in the Western Japan area between January 2019 and May 2020 and gave written consent were registered as study participants, and their medical history of systemic interventions for psoriasis (starting from 2010) was retrospectively collected and analyzed. The drugs investigated were adalimumab, infliximab, ustekinumab, secukinumab, ixekizumab, brodalumab, guselkumab, risankizumab, cyclosporine, and apremilast. When drugs were discontinued, the reasons were also recorded. A total of 1003 patients with psoriasis including 268 with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) were enrolled. In biologics, more recently released drugs such as interleukin 17 inhibitors showed a numerically higher survival rate in the overall (post‐2010) analysis. However, in the subset of patients who began treatment after 2017, the difference in the survival rate among the drugs was smaller. The reasons for discontinuing drugs varied, but a loss of efficacy against dermatological or joint symptoms were relatively frequently seen with some biologics and cyclosporine. The stratification of drug survival rates based on patient characteristics such as bio‐naive or experienced, normal weight or obese, and with or without PsA, revealed that bio‐experienced, obese, and PsA groups had poorer survival rates for most drugs. No notable safety issues were identified in this study. Overall, the present study revealed that the biologics show differences in their tendency to develop a loss of efficacy, and the factors that negatively impact the survival rate of biologics include the previous use of biologics, obesity, and PsA.

Funder

AbbVie

Amgen

Eisai

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Dermatology,General Medicine

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