El cambio de clase terapéutica en la psoriasis relacionado con una mejor eficacia del tratamiento
enero 21, 2019
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Los investigadores trataron de describir los patrones de conmutación en la práctica diaria de la vida real dermatológica entre los pacientes con psoriasis.
Entre pacientes con psoriasiswho require a switch in treatment, a change of therapeutic class appears to be more effective than a switch to an agent in the same therapeutic class, according to the results of a noninterventional, retrospective, multicenter analysis conducted at 11 volunteer dermatology centers in France. Findings from the study were published inDermatologic Therapy.
Los investigadores trataron de describir los patrones de conmutación en la práctica diaria de la vida real dermatológica entre los pacientes con psoriasis. Efficacy was defined as achievement of ≥75% improvement in Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (DESPUÉS 75) score, which was evaluated between 12 y 16 weeks after initiation of a new therapy. Patients enrolled in the study included those who were seen in routine daily practice and were being treated withinfliximab, etanercept, adalimumab, or ustekinumab. A standardized case report form was filled out for each participant, which included the patient’s characteristics and clinical details, including all prior treatments.
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Un total de 1157 patients were included in the study, de los cuales 29.9% (346 de 1157) required a switch in treatment. The mean duration of treatment before the switch was 529.2 days for ustekinumab (distancia, 121-978 día), 450 days for etanercept (distancia, 13-2100 día), 431 days for adalimumab (distancia, 26-1729 día), y 424.2 days for infliximab (distancia, 4-1977 día; PAG=.21). When the first-line biologic agent was administered concomitantly with methotrexate, the mean duration of treatment was 530 día (distancia, 4-2100 día) comparado con 439 día (distancia, 54-1638 día) when the biologic was administered as monotherapy (PAG = 0,14).
Switch in biologic agent, which was attributed to lack of efficacy, loss of therapeutic response, or adverse events, was considered effective in 71.9% of patients and ineffective in 28.1% de los pacientes. Notablemente, switch efficacy was not known for 18 patients because of relocation or missing data.
The results provide a clearer understanding of the profile of patients with psoriasis who require a switch in their therapy, as patients were mostly men, were approximately 40 years of age on initiation of their first biologic agent, and were overweight (mean body mass index, 28 kg/m2). Además, almost half of all individuals who switched had confirmed psoriatic arthritis.
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The investigators concluded that the findings from this study are reflective of the high rate of comorbidities among patients with psoriasis and emphasize the role played by dermatologists in screening comorbidities among patients with psoriasis who require systemic therapy. This role is even more critical in the subpopulation of patients who require a switch from their first-line biologic therapy, regardless of the reason.