CD N Psoriasis Guidelines
CD N Psoriasis Guidelines
CD N Psoriasis Guidelines
Guidelines
for the
Management of
Plaque Psoriasis
1st Edition, June 2009
Canadian Guidelines
for the
Endorsed by
Management of
Plaque
Psoriasis
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Canadian Guidelines for the Management of Plaque Psoriasis
NOTES TO READERS
Disclaimer: These Guidelines are intended to assist physicians in clinical decision making. As always, physicians
should use their best clinical judgment when determining whether and how to apply treatment recommendations.
Clinical decisions must take into account the patients individual circumstances and any newer evidence that may
come to light regarding treatments for plaque psoriasis. This document is not intended to substitute for or supersede
the guidance found in the relevant Canadian product monographs or other official information available for the
therapeutics discussed. Every reasonable effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this document; any
errors will be corrected in the next edition.
Drug names: Generic names have been used throughout this document. A trade name/generic name translator has
been provided as an appendix.
Website: These Guidelines are also available online at http://www.dermatology.ca/psoriasisguidelines
Citation: Canadian Psoriasis Guidelines Committee. Canadian Guidelines for the Management of Plaque Psoriasis,
June 2009. http://www.dermatology.ca/psoriasisguidelines
Address academic correspondence to: Kim Alexander Papp MD PhD FRCPC, Probity Medical Research,
135 Union Street East, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2J 1C4. Email: [email protected]
iii
Editorial support
SCRIPT, Toronto, Ontario:
Helen Leask PhD, Managing Editor, medical writer
John Ashkenas PhD, Senior Editor, medical writer
Shereen Joseph BSc, medical writer
Meenakshi Kashyap PhD, medical writer
Oren Traub MD PhD, medical writer
Sarah von Riedemann MSc, medical writer
Community reviewers
The Guidelines Committee would like to thank
all Community Reviewers for their assistance.
Community Reviewers may have reviewed all
chapters or only those in which they felt they
had expertise or an interest.
Bruce F. Bebo Jr PhD
National Psoriasis Foundation, Portland, Oregon, USA
Vivian Bykerk MD FRCPC
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Charles N. Ellis MD
University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor,
Michigan, USA
iv
Acknowledgments
Financial assistance for the development of these
Guidelines was generously provided by the
following sponsors (in alphabetical order): Abbott
Laboratories, Limited; Amgen Canada Inc.; Astellas
Pharma Canada, Inc.; EMD Serono Canada Inc.;
Galderma Canada Inc.; Isotechnika Inc.; JanssenOrtho Inc.; LEO Pharma Inc.; Schering-Plough
Canada Inc.; and Wyeth.
Sponsors were permitted to submit unpublished
manuscripts for consideration by the Guidelines
Committee, with the proviso that the article had
to be accepted for peer-reviewed publication by a
designated cut-off date. Sponsors were not involved
in any other aspect of the Guidelines development,
nor were they informed of the make-up of the
Guidelines Committee.
Disclosure of potential
conflicts of interest
The following committee members report that,
during the 5 years prior to the Guidelines
development, they had a financial interest in the
following companies:
Stewart P. Adams: Consultancy*: Amgen Canada
Inc.; LEO Pharma Inc.; Novartis Pharmaceuticals
Canada Inc.; and Wyeth. Contract research: Abbott
Laboratories, Limited; Astion Pharma; Biogen Idec
Canada Inc.; Bristol-Myers Squibb Canada Co.;
Centocor Ortho Biotech Inc.; EMD Serono Canada
Inc.; Galderma Canada Inc.; Janssen-Ortho Inc.;
and Novartis Pharmaceuticals Canada Inc.
Lorne Albrecht: Consultancy*: Abbott Laboratories,
Limited; Amgen Canada Inc.; Astellas Pharma
Canada, Inc.; EMD Serono Canada Inc.; JanssenOrtho Inc.; LEO Pharma Inc.; and Schering-Plough
Canada Inc. Contract research: Abbott Laboratories,
Limited; Alza Pharmaceutical; Amgen Canada Inc.;
Astellas Pharma Canada, Inc.; Biogen Idec
Canada Inc.; Bristol-Meyers Squibb Canada Co.;
Centocor Ortho Biotech Inc.; Celgene Corporation;
Isotechnika Inc.; Pfizer Canada Inc.; and ScheringPlough Canada Inc.
vii
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
Canadian Guidelines for the Management of Plaque Psoriasis
AZT = zidovudine
BIW = biweekly
RA = rheumatoid arthritis
IL = interleukin
TB = tuberculosis
MI = myocardial infarction
UV = ultraviolet
NB = narrowband
viii
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
Canadian Guidelines for the Management of Plaque Psoriasis
Key point
However effective a therapy, it wont work if the
patient doesnt use it. The central theme of these
Guidelines is that physicians should not only
choose therapies that work, but those that the
patient will work with.
Presentation of psoriasis
The term psoriasis encompasses a set of chronic
inflammatory dermatoses, of which plaque psoriasis
(psoriasis vulgaris) is the most common. Plaque
psoriasis is distinguished by the presence of red,
erythematous plaques, usually covered with silver,
flaking scales. These plaques are frequently itchy or
1
CHAPTER 1 - intROduction
Genetics
Plaque psoriasis, like other common conditions,
is a disease with substantial heritability that fails
to conform to a simple, single-gene Mendelian
model. At least 20 genetic loci have been proposed
to harbour psoriasis susceptibility (PSORS) genes,
i.e., genes that may interact with environmental
factors and with other features of a persons
genetic background to increase the likelihood
of psoriasis development. Several of these loci,
notably PSORS1, have been identified repeatedly in
independent populations.31
2
CHAPTER 1 - intROduction
CHAPTER 1 - intROduction
Canadian population*
Estimated psoriasis
prevalence by age
group (per 10 000)
Estimated number
of Canadians with
psoriasis by age group
0 to 9
3 499 915
55.02
19 257
10 to 19
4 220 415
137.37
57 976
20 to 29
4 065 965
151.04
61 412
30 to 39
4 228 500
178.01
75 272
40 to 49
5 231 055
203.43
106 415
50 to 59
4 441 920
222.78
98 957
60 to 69
2 824 445
225.95
63 818
70 to 79
1 933 360
161.39
31 202
80 to 89
989 390
88.44
8 750
Over 90
177 925
47.33
842
Total
31 612 895
523 902
CHAPTER 1 - intROduction
References
1. Rapp SR, Feldman SR, Exum ML, et al. Psoriasis causes as much disability as other
major medical diseases. J Am Acad Dermatol 1999;41:4017.
2. Koo J. Population-based epidemiologic study of psoriasis with emphasis on quality of
life assessment. Dermatol Clin 1996;14:48596.
3. Krueger G, Koo J, Lebwohl M, et al. The impact of psoriasis on quality of life: Results
of a 1998 National Psoriasis Foundation Patient-Membership Survey. Arch Dermatol
2001;137:2804.
4. Wahl AK, Gjengedal E, Hanestad BR. The bodily suffering of living with severe
psoriasis: in-depth interviews with 22 hospitalized patients with psoriasis. Qual Health
Res 2002;12:25061.
5. Ginsburg IH, Link BG. Feelings of stigmatization in patients with psoriasis. J Am Acad
Dermatol 1989;20:5363.
6. Vardy D, Besser A, Amir M, et al. Experiences of stigmatization play a role in mediating
the impact of disease severity on quality of life in psoriasis patients. Br J Dermatol
2002;147:73642.
7. Schmid-Ott G, Kuensebeck HW, Jaeger B, et al. Validity study for the stigmatization
experience in atopic dermatitis and psoriatic patients. Acta Derm Venereol
1999;79:4437.
8. Eghlileb AM, Davies EEG, Finlay AY. Psoriasis has a major secondary impact on the
lives of family members and partners. Br J Dermatol 2007;156:124550.
9. Pearce DJ, Singh S, Balkrishnan R, et al. The negative impact of psoriasis on the
workplace. J Dermatolog Treat 2006;17:248.
10. Gupta MA, Gupta AK, Watteel GN. Perceived deprivation of social touch in psoriasis is
associated with greater psychologic morbidity: an index of the stigma experience in
dermatologic disorders. Cutis 1998;61:33942.
11. Gupta MA, Gupta AK. Depression and suicidal ideation in dermatology patients with
acne, alopecia areata, atopic dermatitis and psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 1998;139:84650.
12. Picardi A, Mazzotti E, Pasquini P. Prevalence and correlates of suicidal ideation among
patients with skin disease. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;54:4206.
13. G
elfand JM, Neimann AL, Shin DB, et al. Risk of myocardial infarction in patients with
psoriasis. JAMA 2006;296:173541.
14. G
elfand JM, Troxel AB, Lewis JD, et al. The risk of mortality in patients with psoriasis:
results from a population-based study. Arch Dermatol 2007;143:14939.
15. M
rowietz U, Elder JT, Barker J. The importance of disease associations and
concomitant therapy for the long-term management of psoriasis patients. Arch
Dermatol Research 2006;298:30919.
16. F eldman SR, Fleischer AB, Jr., Cooper JZ. New topical treatments change the pattern
of treatment of psoriasis: dermatologists remain the primary providers of this care.
Int J Dermatol 2000;39:414.
17. H
orn EJ, Fox KM, Patel V, et al. Are patients with psoriasis undertreated? Results of
National Psoriasis Foundation survey. J Am Acad Dermatol 2007;57:95762.
18. Martin BA, Chalmers RJ, Telfer NR. How great is the risk of further psoriasis following
a single episode of acute guttate psoriasis? Arch Dermatol 1996;132:7178.
19. Asumalahti K, Ameen M, Suomela S, et al. Genetic analysis of PSORS1 distinguishes
guttate psoriasis and palmoplantar pustulosis. J Invest Dermatol 2003;120:62732.
20. Mossner R, Kingo K, Kleensang A, et al. Association of TNF -238 and -308 promoter
polymorphisms with psoriasis vulgaris and psoriatic arthritis but not with pustulosis
palmoplantaris. J Invest Dermatol 2005;124:2824.
21. Griffiths CE, Barker JN. Pathogenesis and clinical features of psoriasis. Lancet
2007;370:26371.
22. Gaspari AA. Innate and adaptive immunity and the pathophysiology of psoriasis.
J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;54:S67S80.
23. Lowes MA, Bowcock AM, Krueger JG. Pathogenesis and therapy of psoriasis. Nature
2007;445:86673.
24. Krueger JG. The immunologic basis for the treatment of psoriasis with new biologic
agents. J Am Acad Dermatol 2002;46:123; quiz 2326.
25. Chan JR, Blumenschein W, Murphy E, et al. IL-23 stimulates epidermal hyperplasia
via TNF and IL-20R2-dependent mechanisms with implications for psoriasis
pathogenesis. J Exp Med 2006;203:257787.
26. Nickoloff BJ. Cracking the cytokine code in psoriasis. Nat Med 2007;13:2424.
27. Ottaviani C, Nasorri F, Bedini C, et al. CD56brightCD16(-) NK cells accumulate in
psoriatic skin in response to CXCL10 and CCL5 and exacerbate skin inflammation.
Eur J Immunol 2006;36:11828.
28. Sugiyama H, Gyulai R, Toichi E, et al. Dysfunctional blood and target tissue
CD4+CD25high regulatory T cells in psoriasis: mechanism underlying unrestrained
pathogenic effector T cell proliferation. J Immunol 2005;174:16473.
29. Gordon KB, Bonish BK, Patel T, et al. The tumour necrosis factor-alpha inhibitor
adalimumab rapidly reverses the decrease in epidermal Langerhans cell density in
psoriatic plaques. Br J Dermatol 2005;153:94553.
30. Marble DJ, Gordon KB, Nickoloff BJ. Targeting TNFalpha rapidly reduces density of
dendritic cells and macrophages in psoriatic plaques with restoration of epidermal
keratinocyte differentiation. J Dermatol Sci 2007;48:87101.
31. Liu Y, Krueger JG, Bowcock AM. Psoriasis: Genetic associations and immune system
changes. Genes & Immunity 2007;8:112.
32. E lder JT. PSORS1: Linking genetics and immunology. J Invest Dermatol
2006;126:1205-6.
33. Nair RP, Stuart PE, Nistor I, et al. Sequence and haplotype analysis supports HLA-C as
the psoriasis susceptibility 1 gene. Am J Hum Genet 2006;78:82751.
34. Cargill M, Schrodi SJ, Chang M, et al. A large-scale genetic association study confirms
IL12B and leads to the identification of IL23R as psoriasis-risk genes. Am J Hum
Genet 2007;80:27390.
35. Zhang XJ, Yan KL, Wang ZM, et al. Polymorphisms in interleukin-15 gene on
chromosome 4q31.2 are associated with psoriasis vulgaris in Chinese population.
J Invest Dermatol 2007;127:254451.
36. Gudjonsson JE, Thorarinsson AM, Sigurgeirsson B, et al. Streptococcal throat
infections and exacerbation of chronic plaque psoriasis: a prospective study.
Br J Dermatol 2003;149:5304.
37. Gudjonsson JE, Karason A, Runarsdottir EH, et al. Distinct clinical differences between
HLA-Cw*0602 positive and negative psoriasis patients an analysis of 1019
HLA-C- and HLA-B-typed patients. J Invest Dermatol 2006;126:7405.
38. Gudjonsson JE, Karason A, Antonsdottir AA, et al. HLA-Cw6-positive and HLA-Cw6negative patients with psoriasis vulgaris have distinct clinical features. J Invest
Dermatol 2002;118:3625.
39. Fan X, Yang S, Sun LD, et al. comparison of clinical features of HLA-Cw*0602-positive
and -negative psoriasis patients in a Han Chinese population. Acta Derm Venereol
2007;87:33540.
40. Gelfand JM, Stern RS, Nijsten T, et al. The prevalence of psoriasis in African Americans:
results from a population-based study. J Am Acad Dermatol 2005;52:236.
41. Yip SY. The prevalence of psoriasis in the Mongoloid race. J Am Acad Dermatol
1984;10:9658.
42. Gelfand JM, Weinstein R, Porter SB, et al. Prevalence and treatment of psoriasis in the
United Kingdom: A population-based study. Arch Dermatol 2005;141:153741.
43. El-Rachkidy RG, Hales JM, Freestone PP, et al. Increased blood levels of IgG reactive
with secreted Streptococcus pyogenes proteins in chronic plaque psoriasis. J Invest
Dermatol 2007;127:133742.
44. Abel EA, DiCicco LM, Orenberg EK, et al. Drugs in exacerbation of psoriasis.
J Am Acad Dermatol 1986;15:100722.
45. Fortes C, Mastroeni S, Leffondre K, et al. Relationship between smoking and the
clinical severity of psoriasis. Arch Dermatol 2005;141:15804.
46. Hancox JG, Sheridan SC, Feldman SR, Fleischer AB, Jr. Seasonal variation of
dermatologic disease in the USA: a study of office visits from 1990 to 1998.
Int J Dermatol 2004;43:611.
47. Balkrishnan R, Carroll CL, Camacho FT, Feldman SR. Electronic monitoring of
medication adherence in skin disease: results of a pilot study. J Am Acad Dermatol
2003;49:6514.
48. Carroll CL, Feldman SR, Camacho FT, Balkrishnan R. Better medication adherence
results in greater improvement in severity of psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 2004;151:8957.
49. Ali SM, Brodell RT, Balkrishnan R, Feldman SR. Poor adherence to treatments:
A fundamental principle of dermatology. Arch Dermatol 2007;143:9125.
50. Statistics Canada. Age (123) and Sex (3) for the Population of Canada, 2006
Census. Available: http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/topics/Retrieve
ProductTable.cfm?Temporal=2006&APATH=3&PID=88989&THEME=66&PTYPE=
88971&VID=0&GK=NA&GC=99&FL=0&RL=0&FREE=0&METH=0&S=1 (accessed
January 2008).
CHAPTER 2: METHODS
Canadian Guidelines for the Management of Plaque Psoriasis
Key point
The Guideline development process was designed
to be as reproducible and as transparent as possible,
in order to provide useful clinical guidance, based
on the best available clinical evidence that could
stand up to scrutiny.
CHAPTER 2 - METHODS
CHAPTER 2 - METHODS
Table 1. The modified SIGN scale4 used by the Evidence and Recommendations Committees
Levels of evidence
1++
High-quality meta-analyses, systematic reviews of RCTs, or RCTs with a very low risk of bias
1+
Well-conducted meta-analyses, systematic reviews of RCTs, or RCTs with a low risk of bias
2++
2+
Well-conducted case-control or cohort studies with a low risk of confounding, bias, or chance
and a moderate probability that the relationship is causal
Case-control or cohort studies with a high risk of confounding, bias, or chance and a
significant risk that the relationship is not causal
Expert opinion
Grades of recommendation
A
At least one meta-analysis, systematic review, or RCT rated as 1++, and directly applicable to the
target population; or
A systematic review of RCTs or a body of evidence consisting principally of studies rated as 1+,
directly applicable to the target population, and demonstrating overall consistency of results
A body of evidence including studies rated as 2++, directly applicable to the target population,
and demonstrating overall consistency of results; or
Extrapolated evidence from studies rated as 1++ or 1+
A body of evidence including studies rated as 1, 2, or 2+, directly applicable to the target
population and demonstrating overall consistency of results; or
Extrapolated evidence from studies rated as 2++
Evidence level 3 or 4; or
Extrapolated evidence from studies rated as 2+
CHAPTER 2 - METHODS
References
1. The AGREE Collaboration. Appraisal of Guidelines for Research & Evaluation (AGREE)
Instrument. Available: www.agreecollaboration.org (accessed November 2006).
2. Canadian Medical Association. Handbook on Clinical Practice Guidelines 2007.
Available: http://www.cma.ca//multimedia/CMA/Content_Images/CMAInfobase/EN/
handbook.pdf (accessed June 2007).
3. Canadian Diabetes Association. 2003 Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Prevention and
Management of Diabetes in Canada. Can J Diabetes 2003:27(Suppl 2):S1152.
4. Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network. SIGN 50: A Guideline Developers
Handbook. Available: www.sign.ac.uk (accessed November 2006).
CHAPTER 3: DEFINITIONS
Canadian Guidelines for the Management of Plaque Psoriasis
Types of psoriasis
The term psoriasis encompasses a number of
morphologically distinct presentations that can
occur in isolation, simultaneously, or sequentially.
Until recently, classification and description of these
different phenotypes was not well standardized.
Recent advances in our understanding of the genetic1
and pathogenic mechanisms leading to the different
manifestations of psoriasis2 have necessitated more
precise phenotypic classification. A recent consensus
meeting of the International Psoriasis Council
created the following simplified, phenotype-based
classification of psoriasis, intended for use in both
clinical practice and research.3
Plaque psoriasis
This most common form of the disease is
present in roughly 90% of psoriasis patients;
it is characterized by red, scaly, discoid lesions
(plaques) at least 0.5 cm in diameter. Plaques
may occur as single lesions at predisposed
sites (e.g., knees, elbows) or as generalized
disease across wider areas of the body. There
is sharp demarcation between the plaque and
surrounding normal skin. Expanding plaques
may show clearance in the middle, leading to an
annular pattern. Plaque psoriasis can be further
classified according to specific anatomical sites
and phenotypic variations.
F lexural psoriasis
(see Chapter 9: Management of facial,
flexural, and genital psoriasis)
Also called intertriginous or inverse psoriasis,
this classification refers to thin, minimally
scaly, well-defined plaques confined to skin
folds such as those in the inframammary, groin,
axillary, genital, and/or natal cleft regions.
The shiny surface of the plaques may display
secondary fissuring or maceration.
Nail psoriasis
(see Chapter 10: Management of nail psoriasis)
Nail involvement is common in plaque
psoriasis patients, and it occasionally presents
as an isolated condition in the absence of
skin plaques. Nail involvement can affect
the nail bed and nail matrix and commonly
leads to thickening, pitting, discolouration,
and splintering of the nail plate, as well as
separation of the nail plate from the nail bed.4
Scalp psoriasis
(see Chapter 11: Management of scalp psoriasis)
The scalp is the body area most commonly
affected by plaque psoriasis and is the initial
site of presentation in many patients. Scalp
involvement rarely extends more than 2 cm
beyond the hairline.
Palmoplantar psoriasis (non-pustular)
(see Chapter 12: Management of
palmoplantar psoriasis)
Plaque psoriasis on the palms of the hands or
the soles of the feet can have a wide range of
manifestations, from confluent redness and
scaling without discernable plaques to poorly
defined scaly or fissured areas to large plaques
covering the palm or sole and extending to the
surrounding skin.
Sebopsoriasis
The seborrheic form of plaque psoriasis is so
named because of its similarity to seborrheic
dermatitis, both in location (usually on
the face, notably the nasolabial folds) and
morphology (thin, red, well-demarcated
lesions that may be greasy in appearance). It
may occur in isolation or be associated with
plaque psoriasis elsewhere on the body; in the
absence of other psoriasis, it may be difficult
to distinguish from seborrheic dermatitis.
10
CHAPTER 3 - DEFINITIONS
Erythroderma
In erythrodermic psoriasis, the patient
experiences acute or subacute onset of diffusely
red, inflammatory psoriatic patches, often
covering 90% or more of the patients total
skin surface, and typified by sparse scaling. In
contrast, widespread flares of chronic plaque
psoriasis, which cause far less physiological
stress, may have thicker plaques, as well as
variable scaling. Although erythroderma can
arise de novo, it is most commonly associated
with long-standing, active disease.
Key point
Most of the commonly used definitions of disease
severity, treatment success, and treatment failure
have been developed for use in clinical trials.
Such numerical cut-off values, involving easily
quantified parameters like BSA affected, are
poorly suited to routine clinical practice because
they fail to reflect patients actual burden of
disease. In clinical practice, more patient-centred
standards are needed to assess disease burden
and treatment success.
11
CHAPTER 3 - DEFINITIONS
Description
An index of the severity (thickness, redness, scaling) and extent of body surface
coverage of psoriasis. Scores range from 0 to 72 (0 no disease, 72 maximal
disease). The PASI combines assessment of four body areas: head and neck (H),
upper limbs (U), trunk (T), and lower limbs (L). The proportion of skin affected
by psoriasis in each area is given a numerical score (A) representing the
proportion involved:
1: 09%
2: 1029%
3: 3049%
4: 5069%
5: 7089%
6: 90100%
Within each area the severity of each of three signs, erythema (E), thickness/
induration (I), and desquamation/scaling (S), is assessed on a five-point scale:
0: none
1: mild
2: moderate
3: severe
4: very severe
For each of the four body areas, the three signs scores are added and then
multiplied by the area score. Each body regions score is then multiplied by
the following proportions to reflect its contribution to total body area:
neck and head: 0.1
upper limbs: 0.2
trunk: 0.3
lower limbs: 0.4
Finally, the scores for all four body areas are added to yield the overall
PASI score
PASI change8
CHAPTER 3 - DEFINITIONS
Description
QoL measures
DLQI (Dermatology Life
Quality Index)9
A patient questionnaire to assess itch, pain, feelings of embarrassment/selfconsciousness, problems with treatment and interference of skin disease with
the patients daily activities, relationships, and sexual activity. Score from 0 (no
impairment) to 30 (maximal impairment)
Moderate
plaque
psoriasis
13
CHAPTER 3 - DEFINITIONS
Control
A satisfactory response to therapy, as defined by the patient and/or physician; does not
necessarily involve complete clearance
Remission
Flare
Rebound
Relapse
14
CHAPTER 3 - DEFINITIONS
References
13. Heydendael VMR, Spuls PI, Opmeer BC, et al. Methotrexate versus cyclosporine in
moderate-to-severe chronic plaque psoriasis. N Engl J Med 2003;349:65865.
14. Yones SS, Palmer RA, Garibaldinos TT, Hawk JLM. Randomized double-blind trial of the
treatment of chronic plaque psoriasis: efficacy of psoralen-UV-A therapy vs narrowband
UV-B therapy. Arch Dermatol 2006;142:83642.
15. Menter A, Tyring SK, Gordon K, et al. Adalimumab therapy for moderate to severe
psoriasis: A randomized, controlled phase III trial. J Am Acad Dermatol 2008;58:10615.
16. Dubertret L, Sterry W, Bos JD, et al. Clinical experience acquired with the efalizumab
(Raptiva) (CLEAR) trial in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis: results
from a phase III international randomized, placebo-controlled trial. Br J Dermatol
2006;155:17081.
17. Feldman SR, Gordon KB, Bala M, et al. Infliximab treatment results in significant
improvement in the quality of life of patients with severe psoriasis: a double-blind
placebo-controlled trial. Br J Dermatol 2005;152:95460.
18. Finlay AY. Current severe psoriasis and the rule of tens. Br J Dermatol 2005;152:8617.
19. Tanew A, Guggenbichler A, Honigsmann H, et al. Photochemotherapy for severe psoriasis
without or in combination with acitretin: A randomized, double-blind comparison study.
J Am Acad Dermatol 1991;25:6824.
20. Asawanonda P, Nateetongrungsak Y. Methotrexate plus narrowband UVB phototherapy
versus narrowband UVB phototherapy alone in the treatment of plaque-type psoriasis: a
randomized, placebo-controlled study. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;54:10138.
21. Perlmutter A, Cather J, Franks B, et al. Alefacept revisited: Our 3-year clinical experience
in 200 patients with chronic plaque psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol 2008;58:11624.
22. Gordon KB, Feldman SR, Koo JY, et al. Definitions of measures of effect duration for
psoriasis treatments. Arch Dermatol 2005;141:824.
15
Key point
Psoriasis is almost certainly undertreated in Canada,
as it is elsewhere; some severely affected patients
may be receiving no therapy at all.
17
Recommendations
Recommendation & level of evidence
Grade of recommendation
Grade D
Grade D
Grade D
Grade D
Grade D
References
1. Feldman SR, Fleischer AB, Jr., Cooper JZ. New topical treatments change the pattern
of treatment of psoriasis: dermatologists remain the primary providers of this care.
Int J Dermatol 2000;39:414.
2. Horn EJ, Fox KM, Patel V, et al. Are patients with psoriasis undertreated? Results of
National Psoriasis Foundation survey. J Am Acad Dermatol 2007;57:95762.
3. British Association of Dermatologists. Psoriasis Guidelines 2006.
4. Stern RS, PUVA Follow-up Study. Inpatient hospital care for psoriasis: a vanishing
practice in the United States. J Am Acad Dermatol 2003;49:44550.
5. Ayyalaraju RS, Finlay AY, Dykes PJ, et al. Hospitalization for severe skin disease improves
quality of life in the United Kingdom and the United States: a comparative study.
J Am Acad Dermatol 2003;49:24954.
6. Kurwa HA, Finlay AY. Dermatology in-patient management greatly improves life quality.
Br J Dermatol 1995;133:5758.
7. Cockayne SE, Cork MJ, Gawkrodger DJ. Treatment of psoriasis: Day care vs. inpatient
therapy. Br J Dermatol 1999;140:3756.
8. Pearce DJ, Lucas J, Wood B, et al. Death from psoriasis: representative US data.
J Dermatolog Treat 2006;17:3023.
9. Fouere S, Adjadj L, Pawin H. How patients experience psoriasis: results from a European
survey. J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol 2005;19 Suppl 3:26.
10. Gottlieb AB. Psoriasis: Emerging therapeutic strategies. Nat Rev Drug Discov
2005;4:1934.
11. Krueger G, Koo J, Lebwohl M, et al. The impact of psoriasis on quality of life: Results
of a 1998 National Psoriasis Foundation Patient-Membership Survey. Arch Dermatol
2001;137:2804.
12. Richards HL, Fortune DG, OSullivan TM, et al. Patients with psoriasis and their
compliance with medication. J Am Acad Dermatol 1999;41:5813.
13. Ali SM, Brodell RT, Balkrishnan R, Feldman SR. Poor adherence to treatments:
A fundamental principle of dermatology. Arch Dermatol 2007;143:9125.
14. Brown KK, Rehmus WE, Kimball AB. Determining the relative importance of
patient motivations for nonadherence to topical corticosteroid therapy in psoriasis.
J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;55:60713.
15. Feldman SR, Camacho FT, Krejci-Manwaring J, et al. Adherence to topical therapy
increases around the time of office visits. J Am Acad Dermatol 2007;57:813.
16. Skarpathiotakis M, Fairlie C, Ryan S. Specialized education for patients with psoriasis: a
patient survey on its value and effectiveness. Dermatol Nurs 2006;18:35861.
17. Nijsten T, Rolstad T, Feldman SR, Stern RS. Members of the national psoriasis
foundation: more extensive disease and better informed about treatment options.
Arch Dermatol 2005;141:1926.
18
Corticosteroids
Key point
Individualized approaches are central to the
management of mild psoriasis because there is
such wide variation in patients presentations, their
psychosocial health, and their personal opinions
as to what consitutes acceptable treatment. Thus,
adequate psoriasis care should look beyond clinical
parameters (e.g., body surface area or PASI scores)
to maintain a focus on the patients health-related
quality of life.
Vitamin D3 analogues
Topical calcipotriol exerts its therapeutic effect by
modulating keratinocyte growth and differentiation
and by inhibiting T lymphocyte activity.11 Calcipotriol
is currently the only topical vitamin D3 analogue
available in Canada.
Various clinical trials have validated the safety and
efficacy of calcipotriol12-35 in patients with mild
plaque psoriasis. For example, calcipotriol has
been compared with Class 2 (potent) corticosteroid
ointments and found to be comparable or slightly
more effective than these agents.20,36 One doubleblind right-left comparison study found that
calcipotriol offered a mean PASI reduction of 69%
after 6 weeks of treatment, compared with a 61%
reduction with 0.1% betamethasone 17-valerate
ointment.36 In other studies, vitamin D3 analogues
were also more effective than fluocinonide18 and
betamethasone dipropionate plus salicylic acid.34
A meta-analysis of randomized placebo-controlled
trials involving topical psoriasis treatments1 indicated
that vitamin D3 analogues were as effective as all but
the most potent corticosteroids. It was also reported
that calcipotriol was superior to anthralin in terms of
clinical efficacy.37
Although calcipotriol is not as effective as Class 1
topical corticosteroids, it may be better tolerated,
with fewer adverse effects. A systematic review by
Bruner et al.2 reported that, in comparison with
other topical therapies, vitamin D3 analogues were
associated with a relatively low rate of adverse
events. The most common adverse effect associated
with vitamin D3 analogues is a mild irritant contact
dermatitis.38 Hypercalcemia has also been reported
but is rare with the doses used in clinical settings,39
which should be limited to 5 mg calcipotriol (100 g
of calcipotriol cream or ointment) per week.
Retinoids
The topical retinoid tazarotene is one of the more
recently approved topical therapies for psoriasis.
Like oral retinoids, tazarotene is thought to exert
its therapeutic effect by modulating keratinocyte
Combination therapy
In general, combination therapy is more efficacious and
can result in reduced incidence of adverse effects when
compared with monotherapy alone. Several studies
have examined the concomitant or sequential use of
topical corticosteroids with vitamin D3 analogues
for the treatment of patients and demonstrated this
combination was safe,58 effective, and reduced the
irritation associated with either agent alone.26,28,35,59-65
Thus, in one study, calcipotriol was applied in the
morning and halobetasol ointment in the evening,
resulting in a reduced overall severity of psoriasis versus
monotherapy.66 Another study used a similar regimen
for 2 weeks and then switched patients to pulse therapy
consisting of halobetasol ointment twice daily on
weekends and calcipotriol ointment twice daily on
weekdays.67 This approach was superior to either of the
two agents when pulsed with placebo.
Studies of a fixed-dose preparation of calcipotriol
and betamethasone dipropionate have confirmed
the efficacy of this vitamin D3 analogue/
For
corticosteroid
combination.26,61,64,65,68,69
instance, one randomized study examined the use
of calcipotriol/betamethasone dipropionate for
4 weeks followed by maintenance with calcipotriol
for 8 weeks, comparing this treatment with
calcipotriol alone for 12 weeks. Clinical endpoints
21
Other approaches
Non-medicinal topical treatments
Emollients, moisturizers, ointments, and similar,
non-medicinal topical treatments are widely
used, but their efficacy has not been thoroughly
investigated, and there is little direct evidence
that they are beneficial, either in mild or in more
severe psoriasis. However, one study77 established
that the use of a water-in-oil cream or lotion in
combination with betamethasone dipropionate
cream can increase the efficacy of steroid treatment
and allow patients to achieve control with lower
corticosteroid doses. The steroid-sparing effects
of such emollients, as well as their still-unproved
benefits as monotherapy, have been attributed
to their ability to restore normal hydration and
water barrier function to the epidermal layer of the
psoriatic plaque.78
Regardless of their efficacy or their mechanism
of action, moisturizers and related topicals are
unquestionably central to the routine skin care that
dermatologists prescribe and that individuals with
psoriasis commonly use, even when not under a
physicians care.
The presumed benefit of these agents raises a
common methodological issue in the literature
on mild psoriasis, since the more rigorous studies
typically employ the vehicle, or some other bland
emollient, as the comparator (placebo) treatment.
In some cases, both the experimental arm and
the placebo arm of the trial show significant
improvement relative to the patients condition at
baseline, although there is no significant difference
between treatment arms. In such cases, it remains
possible that the experimental treatment (e.g.,
plant products such as Aloe vera gel79 or kukui
nut oil80) is indeed superior to leaving the disease
untreated, although the emollient properties of the
treatment may fully explain any such benefit.
For certain other topical treatments that have been
explored for use in mild psoriasis, a relatively
slender evidence base supports the claim
of benefits over and above those of a simple
emollient. This is the case for fish oilbased topicals
Measures of success
Various assessment tools have been developed to
quantify the response to treatment and compare
the efficacy of topical regimens. These scales can
include* physician-assessed response (PASI, OLS,
PGA, and target lesion assessment), patient-assessed
response (DLQI, DQOLS, SF-36, VAS, PSA Scale),
or composite tools.86-97 However, there are no largescale randomized controlled studies to evaluate the
comparative utility of these different scales during
routine clinical visits or the optimal frequency
of assessment.
The physical manifestations of psoriasis can have
a profound impact on psychosocial health (see
Chapter 13: Social and psychological aspects of
psoriasis). Fortunately, many topical treatments,
including steroids, vitamin D3 analogues, retinoids,
anthralin, and tar, are superior to placebo and can
help mitigate these clinical endpoints of psoriasis.1
However, each treatment is also associated with
a distinct profile of factors (e.g., convenience,
tolerability, adverse effects) that can have a negative
effect on health-related quality of life, interfering
with treatment adherence and thereby limiting realworld efficacy.2,98-100
*PASI = Psoriasis Area and Severity Index; OLS Scale = Overall Lesion Severity Scale; PGA = Physicians General Assessment; DLQI = Dermatological Life Quality Index;
DQOLS = Dermatology Quality-of-Life Scales; SF-36 = Short-Form 36 Health Survey; VAS = Visual Analogue Scale; PSA Scale = Psoriatic Arthritis Scale.
22
Recommendations
Care for individuals with chronic mild plaque
psoriasis affecting the trunk, limbs, and neck should
follow the recommendations shown below. More
severe psoriasis is considered in the following
chapter (Chapter 6: Management of moderate to
severe plaque psoriasis); acute flares are discussed
in Chapter 8 (Exacerbation and flare of psoriasis). For
recommendations on treating psoriasis affecting the
palms or soles; the nails; scalp; or facial, flexural,
or genital regions, the physician is referred to the
appropriate chapters of these Guidelines.
Recommendations
Recommendation & level of evidence
Grade of recommendation
Grade A
Grade A
Grade B
Grade D
Because many standard topical therapies for the treatment of mild chronic
plaque psoriasis are superior to placebo, including corticosteroids,
calcipotriol, tazarotene, anthralin, tars, and various combination products,
individualized approaches are indicated in choosing specific treatments and
may supersede the above recommendations (LoE 4)
Grade D
Physicians should consider the vehicle used in topical agents and select
formulations that will be acceptable to the patient (LoE 4)
Grade D
Grade D
23
Recommendations (cont.)
Recommendation & level of evidence
Patients with mild, uncomplicated plaque psoriasis who respond to first- or
second-line therapy can be safely managed by their primary care providers.
Grade of recommendation
Grade D
Grade D
24
References
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2. Bruner CR, Feldman SR, Ventrapragada M, Fleischer AB, Jr. A systematic review of
adverse effects associated with topical treatments for psoriasis. Dermatol Online J
2003;9:2.
3. Hengge UR, Ruzicka T, Schwartz RA, Cork MJ. Adverse effects of topical
glucocorticosteroids. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;54:118.
4. Morman MR. Possible side effects of topical steroids. Am Fam Physician 1981;23:1714.
5. Prawer SE, Katz HI. Guidelines for using superpotent topical steroids. Am Fam Physician
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6. Roeder A, Schaller M, Schafer-Korting M, Korting HC. Safety and efficacy of fluticasone
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7. Katz HI, Prawer SE, Medansky RS, et al. Intermittent corticosteroid maintenance
treatment of psoriasis: A double-blind multicenter trial of augmented betamethasone
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8. du Vivier A, Stoughton RB. Tachyphylaxis to the action of topically applied corticosteroids.
Arch Dermatol 1975;111:5813.
9. Miller JJ, Roling D, Margolis D, Guzzo C. Failure to demonstrate therapeutic
tachyphylaxis to topically applied steroids in patients with psoriasis. J Am Acad
Dermatol 1999;41:5469.
10. Lebwohl MG, Tan MH, Meador SL, Singer G. Limited application of fluticasone
propionate ointment, 0.005% in patients with psoriasis of the face and intertriginous
areas. J Am Acad Dermatol 2001;44:7782.
11. Gerritsen MJ, Rulo HF, van Vlijmen-Willems I, et al. Topical treatment of psoriatic plaques
with 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3: a cell biological study. Br J Dermatol 1993;128:66673.
12. Adisen E, Gulekon A, Gurer MA. The clinical efficacy of topical calcipotriol and
methylprednisolone aceponate in chronic plaque psoriasis. Gazi Tip Dergisi
2003;14:1759.
13. Kragballe K, Austad J, Barnes L, et al. A 52-week randomized safety study of a
calcipotriol/betamethasone dipropionate two-compound product (Dovobet/Daivobet/
Taclonex) in the treatment of psoriasis vulgaris. Br J Dermatol 2006;154:115560.
14. Safety and tolerability of calcipotriol in psoriasis. Br J Clin Pract Suppl 1996;83:268.
15. Ashcroft DM, Li Wan Po A, Williams HC, Griffiths CE. Cost-effectiveness analysis of
topical calcipotriol versus short-contact dithranol in the treatment of mild to moderate
plaque psoriasis. Pharmacoeconomics 2000;18:46976.
16. Ashcroft DM, Li Wan Po A, Williams HC, Griffiths CEM. Systematic review of
comparative efficacy and tolerability of calcipotriol in treating chronic plaque psoriasis.
BMJ 2000;320:9637.
17. Berth-Jones J, Chu AC, Dodd WAH, et al. A multicentre, parallel-group comparison of
calcipotriol ointment and short-contact dithranol therapy in chronic plaque psoriasis.
Br J Dermatol 1992;127:26671.
18. Bruce S, Epinette WW, Funicella T, et al. Comparative study of calcipotriene (MC 903)
ointment and fluocinonide ointment in the treatment of psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol
1994;31:7559.
19. Crosti C, Finzi AF, Mian E, Scarpa C. Calcipotriol in psoriasis vulgaris: a controlled trial
comparing betamethasone dipropionate + salicylic acid. Int J Dermatol 1997;36:5379.
20. Cunliffe WJ, Berth-Jones J, Claudy A, et al. Comparative study of calcipotriol (MC 903)
ointment and betamethasone 17- valerate ointment in patients with psoriasis vulgaris.
J Am Acad Dermatol 1992;26:73643.
21. Green C, Ganpule M, Harris D, et al. Comparative effects of calcipotriol (MC903)
solution and placebo (vehicle of MC903) in the treatment of psoriasis of the scalp.
Br J Dermatol 1994;130:4837.
22. Harrington CI, Goldin D, Lovell CR, et al. Comparative effects of two different calcipotriol
(MC 903) cream formulations versus placebo in psoriasis vulgaris. A randomised,
double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group multi-centre study. J Eur Acad
Dermatol Venereol 1996;6:1528.
23. Highton A, Quell J, Breneman D, et al. Calcipotriene ointment 0.005% for psoriasis: A
safety and efficacy study. J Am Acad Dermatol 1995;32:6772.
24. Kose O. Calcipotriol ointment vs clobetasol solution in scalp psoriasis. J Dermatolog Treat
1997;8:287.
25. Kragballe K. Treatment of psoriasis by the topical application of the novel cholecalciferol
analogue calcipotriol (MC 903). Arch Dermatol 1989;125:164752.
26. Kragballe K, Barnes L, Hamberg KJ, et al. Calcipotriol cream with or without
concurrent topical corticosteroid in psoriasis: Tolerability and efficacy. Br J Dermatol
1998;139:64954.
27. Kragballe K, Fogh K, Sogaard H. Long-term efficacy and tolerability of topical calcipotriol
in psoriasis. Results of an open study. Acta Derm Venereol 1991;71:4758.
28. Molin L, Cutler TP, Helander I, et al. Comparative efficacy of calcipotriol (MC903)
cream and betamethasone 17-valerate cream in the treatment of chronic plaque
psoriasis. A randomized, double-blind, parallel group multicentre study. Br J Dermatol
1997;136:8993.
29. Mozzanica N, Cattaneo A, Schmitt E, et al. Topical calcipotriol (MC 903) for psoriasis: a
clinical study. Acta Derm Venereol Suppl (Stockh) 1994;186:16970.
30. Oh PI, Gupta AK, Einarson TR, et al. Calcipotriol in the treatment of psoriasis of limited
severity: Pharmacoeconomic evaluation. J Cutan Med Surg 1997;2:715.
31. Ortonne JP, Humbert P, Nicolas JF, et al. Intra-individual comparison of the cutaneous
safety and efficacy of calcitriol 3 microg g(-1) ointment and calcipotriol 50 microg
g(-1) ointment on chronic plaque psoriasis localized in facial, hairline, retroauricular or
flexural areas. Br J Dermatol 2003;148:32633.
32. Pinheiro N. Comparative effects of calcipotriol ointment (50mug/g) and 5% coal tar/2%
allantoin/0.5% hydrocortosone cream in treating plaque psoriasis. Br J Clin Pract
1997;51:169.
33. Ruzicka T, Lorenz B. Comparison of calcipotriol monotherapy and a combination of
calcipotriol and betamethasone valerate after 2 weeks treatment with calcipotriol in
the topical therapy of psoriasis vulgaris: a multicentre, double-blind, randomized study.
Br J Dermatol 1998;138:2548.
34. Scarpa C. Calcipotriol: clinical trial versus betamethasone dipropionate + salicylic acid.
Acta Derm Venereol Suppl (Stockh) 1994;186:47.
35. Cassano N, Miracapillo A, Coviello C, et al. Treatment of psoriasis vulgaris with the
two-compound product calcipotriol/betamethasone dipropionate followed by different
formulations of calcipotriol. Clin Drug Invest 2006;26:22733.
36. Kragballe K, Gjertsen BT, De Hoop D, et al. Double-blind, right/left comparison of
calcipotriol and betamethasone valerate in treatment of psoriasis vulgaris. Lancet
1991;337:1936.
37. Wall ARJ, Poyner TF, Menday AP. A comparison of treatment with dithranol and
calcipotriol on the clinical severity and quality of life in patients with psoriasis.
Br J Dermatol 1998;139:100511.
38. Lebwohl M, Ali S. Treatment of psoriasis. Part 1. Topical therapy and phototherapy.
J Am Acad Dermatol 2001;45:48798; quiz 99502.
39. Mortensen L, Kragballe K, Wegmann E, et al. Treatment of psoriasis vulgaris with topical
calcipotriol has no short-term effect on calcium or bone metabolism. A randomized,
double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Acta Derm Venereol 1993;73:3004.
40. Duvic M, Nagpal S, Asano AT, Chandraratna RA. Molecular mechanisms of tazarotene
action in psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol 1997;37:S1824.
41. Gottlieb S, Hayes E, Gilleaudeau P, et al. Cellular actions of etretinate in psoriasis:
enhanced epidermal differentiation and reduced cell-mediated inflammation are
unexpected outcomes. J Cutan Pathol 1996;23:40418.
42. Green L, Sadoff W. A clinical evaluation of tazarotene 0.1% gel, with and without a
high- or mid-high-potency corticosteroid, in patients with stable plaque psoriasis.
J Cutan Med Surg 2002;6:95102.
43. Guenther LC, Poulin YP, Pariser DM. A comparison of tazarotene 0.1% gel once
daily plus mometasone furoate 0.1% cream once daily versus calcipotriene 0.005%
ointment twice daily in the treatment of plaque psoriasis. Clin Ther 2000;22:122538.
44. Lebwohl M, Ast E, Callen JP, et al. Once-daily tazarotene gel versus twice-daily
fluocinonide cream in the treatment of plaque psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol
1998;38:70511.
45. Lebwohl MG, Breneman DL, Goffe BS, et al. Tazarotene 0.1% gel plus corticosteroid
cream in the treatment of plaque psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol 1998;39:5906.
46. Poulin YP. Tazarotene 0.1% gel in combination with mometasone furoate cream in
plaque psoriasis: a photographic tracking study. Cutis 1999;63:418.
47. Scher RK, Stiller M, Zhu YI. Tazarotene 0.1% gel in the treatment of fingernail psoriasis:
a double-blind, randomized, vehicle-controlled study. Cutis 2001;68:3558.
48. Tzung T-Y, Wu J-C, Hsu N-J, et al. Comparison of tazarotene 0.1% gel plus petrolatum
once daily versus calcipotriol 0.005% ointment twice daily in the treatment of plaque
psoriasis. Acta Derm Venereol 2005;85:2369.
49. Weinstein GD, Krueger GG, Lowe NJ, et al. Tazarotene gel, a new retinoid, for topical
therapy of psoriasis: Vehicle-controlled study of safety, efficacy, and duration of
therapeutic effect. J Am Acad Dermatol 1997;37:8592.
50. Weinstein GD, Koo JY, Krueger GG, et al. Tazarotene cream in the treatment of psoriasis:
Two multicenter, double-blind, randomized, vehicle-controlled studies of the safety
and efficacy of tazarotene creams 0.05% and 0.1% applied once daily for 12 weeks.
J Am Acad Dermatol 2003;48:7607.
51. Ramsay B, Lawrence CM, Bruce JM, Shuster S. The effect of triethanolamine
application on anthralin-induced inflammation and therapeutic effect in psoriasis.
J Am Acad Dermatol 1990;23:736.
52. Volden G, Bjornberg A, Tegner E, et al. Short-contact treatment at home with Micanol.
Acta Derm Venereol Suppl (Stockh) 1992;172:202.
53. Runne U, Kunze J. Short-duration (minutes) therapy with dithranol for psoriasis: a new
out-patient regimen. Br J Dermatol 1982;106:1359.
54. de Korte J, van der Valk PG, Sprangers MA, et al. A comparison of twice-daily
calcipotriol ointment with once-daily short-contact dithranol cream therapy: quality-oflife outcomes of a randomized controlled trial of supervised treatment of psoriasis in a
day-care setting. Br J Dermatol 2008;158:37581.
25
26
Clinical goals
Appropriate clinical goals for managing plaque
psoriasis are also a matter of dispute. Some years
ago, it was prominently argued that disease clearance
represents an unrealistic standard for success in treating
this lifelong, chronic condition. Amelioration, i.e.,
short-term improvement and limited long-term disease
control, was suggested as a more appropriate goal in
the real world of a dermatology clinic, where patient
histories are more heterogeneous than in clinical trials
and where treatment adherence is far from optimal.1
For some patients with moderate to severe psoriasis,
amelioration may be an adequate treatment goal, and
indeed, many therapeutic tools are available that can
be used, even as monotherapy, to achieve some degree
of control. There is abundant evidence that each of the
therapies listed in Table 1 can be used to this end, as
documented by at least a 5075% reduction in PASI
score in a significant proportion of treated patients.
However, the literature also shows that clearance can
be achieved using phototherapy and that this goal has
become all the more realistic with the introduction
of biologic agents in recent years. Indeed, some
patients on biologics experience periods essentially
Key point
For some patients with moderate to severe psoriasis,
amelioration may be an adequate treatment goal,
and many therapeutic tools are available that can be
used, even as monotherapy, to achieve some degree
of control (see Table 1). However, the literature also
shows that clearance is feasible, particularly with
the introduction of biologic agents in recent years.
Hence, full clearance represents an appropriate goal
in treating many patients (see Table 2).
27
Systemic agents
Acitretin
Acitretin is the only antipsoriatic retinoid drug
available for systemic use in Canada. Retinoids
as a class are teratogenic, placing severe
constraints on the use of acitretin in women of
childbearing age and potential (see Table 1).
Common side effects include mucocutaneous
dryness (often obvious as chapped lips) and
elevation of triglycerides.8 Rarer events,
including skeletal abnormalities such as
diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH)
syndrome, remain a concern, but their incidence
appears to be low in individuals receiving the
standard doses.9 Low-dose acitretin (25 mg/day)
is safer and better tolerated than higher-dose
(50 mg/day) treatment.
There is little evidence for the benefit of
acitretin monotherapy in plaque psoriasis,10,11
but the combination of acitretin with topical
calcipotriol has been reported to increase
rates of clearance,12 and the combination of
acitretin with biologic therapy has also been
explored.13 Use of acitretin in combination with
phototherapies is discussed below.
Cyclosporine
Cyclosporine is a calcineurin inhibitor used as
an immunomodulator in a variety of indications,
including chronic plaque psoriasis. Although it
can be effective in long-term, continuous use,14
cyclosporine is associated with cumulative renal
toxicity,15 causing loss of renal function that
may be reversible following discontinuation.16,17
In addition to its adverse effects on the
kidney, this drug can cause hypertension and
hypertriglyceridemia, particularly in patients
with prior elevation of diastolic blood pressure
or triglycerides.18 The risk of SCC and other
forms of non-melanoma skin cancer also rises
with increasing time on cyclosporine.19
It has been proposed that continuous
cyclosporine, for periods up to 2 years, is
appropriate for a subset of patients. Annual
monitoring of glomerular filtration rate is
recommended when cyclosporine is provided
in this manner, in addition to routine, monthly
assessments of blood pressure and creatinine
32
Achieving clearance
Table 2 describes monotherapies and combination
regimens that may be used to achieve complete or
nearly complete clearance of psoriatic symptoms,
along with the strength of evidence for each in this
regard. The recommended regimens may be suitable
for only a subset of patients, as a result of individual
medical history, lifestyle, or other constraints. It
is suggested that patients explore all appropriate
choices to identify ones that can be used over the
long term to achieve and maintain adequate control
of their psoriasis.
Recommendations
Recommendation & level of evidence
Grade of recommendation
For patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis affecting the trunk
and extremities, the physician should aim to control the symptoms stably
and to an extent that the patient judges adequate (LoE 4)
Grade D
Grade D
Grade B
Grade B
Grade D
34
References
Topical agent
Calcipotriol/
betamethasone
dipropionate
combination ointment
LoE 1++
Ref. 6
LoE 1-
Refs. 8, 10
LoE 1++
Ref. 21
LoE 1+
Methotrexate
Immunomodulatory and
anti-proliferative drug, often chosen
for long-term management
Use is limited by risk of liver toxicity
and the requirement for ongoing
monitoring of liver function.33,105
Sometimes administered with folate
supplement to reduce systemic
toxicity26
35
References
Biologic agents
Adalimumab
LoE 1++
Refs. 2,50
LoE 1++
Ref. 108
LoE 1++
Ref. 73
LoE 1++
Refs. 109,110
Infliximab
Alefacept
36
References
LoE 2++
Refs.
85,90,112
LoE 2++
Refs.
85,90,112
Photo(chemo)therapeutic methods
UVA with psoralen
(PUVA)
UVB
*Efficacy reflects at least a 75% improvement in PASI score, as determined by a statistically significant
difference from placebo in studies of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.
Therapy not well suited to placebo control.
37
Etanercept
(50 mg BIW,
stepped down
to 25 mg)
Etanercept
(50 mg BIW)
Infliximab
Adalimumab
Regimen
Notes
Table 2. Therapeutic regimens to be considered for potential clearance of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis
(alphabetical listing)
38
RePUVA
administered
thrice weekly
with daily oral
acitretin
Addition of acitretin
significantly decreases the
UVA dose required for
clearance95,113
Treatment to be discontinued
upon clearance of symptoms
and may be reinitiated when
needed
Notes
Narrowband
Patients may achieve
UVB administered clearance within
thrice weekly
415 weeks (LoE 1+90)
Treatment to be discontinued
upon clearance of symptoms
and may be reinitiated when
needed
PUVA or
Patients may achieve
narrowband
clearance within 415 weeks
UVB administered (LoE 1+85,90,91)
twice weekly
Regimen
Table 2. Therapeutic regimens to be considered for potential clearance of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis
(alphabetical listing) (cont.)
39
Regimen
Broadband
ReUVB with daily
oral acitretin
Narrowband
ReUVB
administered four
times weekly
with daily topical
tazarotene
Narrowband UVB
administered
thrice weekly plus
weekly alefacept
Phototherapy may be
discontinued upon clearance
of symptoms and reinitiated
when topical treatment offers
insufficient control
Notes
Table 2. Therapeutic regimens to be considered for potential clearance of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis
(alphabetical listing) (cont.)
40
Regimen
Broadband UVB
administered
twice weekly
with daily topical
calcipotriol
UVB plus
crude coal tar
(Goeckerman
and related
procedures)
Addition of calcipotriol
significantly decreases the
UVB dose required for
clearance
Phototherapy may be
discontinued upon clearance
of symptoms and reinitiated
when topical treatment offers
insufficient control
Notes
Table 2. Therapeutic regimens to be considered for potential clearance of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis
(alphabetical listing) (cont.)
41
Drug interactions
Acitretin114
Cyclosporine115
Etoposide
Lercanidipine
Potassium-sparing diuretics and other
antihypertensive agents
(angiotensin-converting enzyme
inhibitors, angiotensin II receptor
antagonists)
Repaglinide
For drugs that may alter cyclosporine
exposure, consult the product monographs
Methotrexate116
42
Note added in proof: In December 2008, Health Canada approved an additional biologic agent,
ustekinumab, on the strength of two reports (Refs. 117, 118). Ustekinumab is indicated for use
in moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.
References
27. van Ede AE, Laan RF, Rood MJ, et al. Effect of folic or folinic acid supplementation on
the toxicity and efficacy of methotrexate in rheumatoid arthritis: a forty-eight week,
multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Arthritis Rheum
2001;44:151524.
28. Kirby B, Lyon CC, Griffiths CE, Chalmers RJ. The use of folic acid supplementation
in psoriasis patients receiving methotrexate: a survey in the United Kingdom.
Clin Exp Dermatol 2000;25:2658.
29. Strober BE, Menon K. Folate supplementation during methotrexate therapy for patients
with psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol 2005;53:6529.
30. Brownell I, Strober BE. Folate with methotrexate: Big benefit, questionable cost.
Br J Dermatol 2007;157:213.
31. Flytstrom I, Stenberg B, Svensson A, Bergbrant IM. Methotrexate vs. ciclosporin
in psoriasis: effectiveness, quality of life and safety. A randomized controlled trial.
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32. van Dooren-Greebe RJ, Kuijpers ALA, Mulder J, et al. Methotrexate revisited: Effects of
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33. Malatjalian DA, Ross JB, Williams CN, et al. Methotrexate hepatotoxicity in psoriatics:
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34. Roenigk HH, Jr., Auerbach R, Maibach H, et al. Methotrexate in psoriasis: consensus
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38. Stern RS. Lymphoma risk in psoriasis: results of the PUVA follow-up study.
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39. Kuijpers AL, van de Kerkhof PC. Risk-benefit assessment of methotrexate in the
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40. Paul C, Le Tourneau A, Cayuela JM, et al. Epstein-Barr virus-associated
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41. Zonneveld IM, Bakker WK, Dijkstra PF, et al. Methotrexate osteopathy in long-term,
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42. Zhou Y, Rosenthal D, Dutz J, Ho V. Mycophenolate mofetil (CellCept) for psoriasis: A
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43. Kumar B, Saraswat A, Kaur I. Rediscovering hydroxyurea: its role in recalcitrant
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44. Pedraz J, Dauden E, Delgado-Jimenez Y, et al. Sequential study on the treatment
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45. Ranjan N, Sharma NL, Shanker V, et al. Methotrexate versus hydroxycarbamide
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46. Kumar B, Saraswat A, Kaur I. Mucocutaneous adverse effects of hydroxyurea:
a prospective study of 30 psoriasis patients. Clin Exp Dermatol 2002;27:813.
47. Wallis RS. Tumour necrosis factor antagonists: structure, function, and tuberculosis
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48. Salliot C, Gossec L, Ruyssen-Witrand A, et al. Infections during tumour necrosis
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49. Gordon KB, Langley RG, Leonardi C, et al. Clinical response to adalimumab treatment
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50. Menter A, Tyring SK, Gordon K, et al. Adalimumab therapy for moderate to severe
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51. Schiff MH, Burmester GR, Kent JD, et al. Safety analyses of adalimumab (HUMIRA) in
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52. Fulchiero Jr GJ, Salvaggio H, Drabick JJ, et al. Eruptive latent metastatic melanomas after
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53. Pirard D, Arco D, Debrouckere V, Heenen M. Anti-tumor necrosis factor alpha-induced
psoriasiform eruptions: Three further cases and current overview. Dermatology
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54. Grinblat B, Scheinberg M. The enigmatic development of psoriasis and psoriasiform
lesions during anti-TNF therapy: A review. Semin Arthritis Rheum 2008;37:2515.
55. Papp KA, Tyring S, Lahfa M, et al. A global phase III randomized controlled trial of
etanercept in psoriasis: safety, efficacy, and effect of dose reduction. Br J Dermatol
2005;152:130412.
56. Leonardi CL, Powers JL, Matheson RT, et al. Etanercept as monotherapy in patients with
psoriasis. N Engl J Med 2003;349:201422.
57. Tyring S, Gordon KB, Poulin Y, et al. Long-term safety and efficacy of 50 mg of
etanercept twice weekly in patients with psoriasis. Arch Dermatol 2007;143:71926.
58. Krueger GG, Elewski B, Papp K, et al. Patients with psoriasis respond to continuous
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59. Orenstein R, Matteson EL. TNF inhibitors and infections. Infections in Medicine
2006;23:99114.
60. Ly L, Czarnecki D. The rapid onset of multiple squamous cell carcinomas during
etanercept treatment for psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 2007;157:10768.
61. Goiriz R, Dauden E, Perez-Gala S, et al. Flare and change of psoriasis morphology
during the course of treatment with tumour necrosis factor blockers. Clin Exp Dermatol
2007;32:1769.
62. Bianchi L, Giunta A, Papoutsaki M, et al. Efficacy and safety of long-term infliximab
therapy in moderate to severe psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis. Giornale Italiano di
Dermatologia e Venereologia 2006;141:738.
63. Menter A, Feldman SR, Weinstein GD, et al. A randomized comparison of continuous vs.
intermittent infliximab maintenance regimens over 1 year in the treatment of moderateto-severe plaque psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol 2007;56:31 e115.
64. Feldman SR, Gordon KB, Bala M, et al. Infliximab treatment results in significant
improvement in the quality of life of patients with severe psoriasis: a double-blind
placebo-controlled trial. Br J Dermatol 2005;152:95460.
65. Krathen RA, Berthelot CN, Hsu S. Sustained efficacy and safety of infliximab in psoriasis:
a retrospective study of 73 patients. J Drugs Dermatol 2006;5:2514.
66. Smith CH, Jackson K, Bashir SJ, et al. Infliximab for severe, treatment-resistant
psoriasis: a prospective, open-label study. Br J Dermatol 2006;155:1609.
67. Ahmad K, Rogers S. Three years experience with infliximab in recalcitrant psoriasis.
Clin Exp Dermatol 2006;31:6303.
68. Ogilvie AL, Antoni C, Dechant C, et al. Treatment of psoriatic arthritis with antitumour
necrosis factor-alpha antibody clears skin lesions of psoriasis resistant to treatment
with methotrexate. Br J Dermatol 2001;144:5879.
69. Maini R, St Clair EW, Breedveld F, et al. Infliximab (chimeric anti-tumour necrosis factor
alpha monoclonal antibody) versus placebo in rheumatoid arthritis patients receiving
concomitant methotrexate: a randomised phase III trial. ATTRACT Study Group. Lancet
1999;354:19329.
70. Tektonidou MG. Neurological complications of infliximab. J Rheumatol 2007;34:237.
71. Saleem G, Li SC, MacPherson BR, Cooper SM. Hepatitis with interface inflammation
and IgG, IgM, and IgA anti-double-stranded DNA antibodies following infliximab
therapy: comment on the article by Charles et al. Arthritis Rheum 2001;44:19668.
72. Foeldvari I, Kruger E, Schneider T. Acute, non-obstructive, sterile cholecystitis
associated with etanercept and infliximab for the treatment of juvenile polyarticular
rheumatoid arthritis. Ann Rheum Dis 2003;62:9089.
73. Reich K, Nestle FO, Papp K, et al. Infliximab induction and maintenance therapy for
moderate-to-severe psoriasis: a phase III, multicentre, double-blind trial. Lancet
2005;366:136774.
74. Goffe B, Papp K, Gratton D, et al. An integrated analysis of thirteen trials summarizing
the long-term safety of alefacept in psoriasis patients who have received up to nine
courses of therapy. Clin Ther 2005;27:191221.
75. Menter A, Cather JC, Baker D, et al. The efficacy of multiple courses of alefacept
in patients with moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol
2006;54:613.
76. Leonardi CL, Strober BE. On multiple courses of alefacept. J Am Acad Dermatol
2006;55:9167.
77. Legat FJ, Hofer A, Wackernagel A, et al. Narrowband UV-B phototherapy, alefacept, and
clearance of psoriasis. Arch Dermatol 2007;143:101622.
78. Perlmutter A, Cather J, Franks B, et al. Alefacept revisited: Our 3-year clinical experience
in 200 patients with chronic plaque psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol 2008;58:11624.
79. Erkin G, Uur Y, Gurer CK, et al. Effect of PUVA, narrow-band UVB and cyclosporin on
inflammatory cells of the psoriatic plaque. J Cutan Pathol 2007;34:2139.
80. Martin JA, Laube S, Edwards C, et al. Rate of acute adverse events for narrowband UVB and Psoralen-UVA phototherapy. Photodermatol Photoimmunol Photomed
2007;23:6872.
81. Diffey BL. Factors affecting the choice of a ceiling on the number of exposures with
TL01 ultraviolet B phototherapy. Br J Dermatol 2003;149:42830.
82. Halpern SM, Anstey AV, Dawe RS, et al. Guidelines for topical PUVA: a report of a
workshop of the British photodermatology group. Br J Dermatol 2000;142:2231.
83. Ibbotson SH, Bilsland D, Cox NH, et al. An update and guidance on narrowband
ultraviolet B phototherapy: a British Photodermatology Group Workshop Report.
Br J Dermatol 2004;151:28397.
84. Tzaneva S, Honigsmann H, Tanew A, Seeber A. A comparison of psoralen plus ultraviolet
A (PUVA) monotherapy, tacalcitol plus PUVA and tazarotene plus PUVA in patients with
chronic plaque-type psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 2002;147:74853.
85. Yones SS, Palmer RA, Garibaldinos TT, Hawk JLM. Randomized double-blind trial of the
treatment of chronic plaque psoriasis: efficacy of psoralen-UV-A therapy vs narrowband
UV-B therapy. Arch Dermatol 2006;142:83642.
86. Stern RS, PUVA Follow-up Study. The risk of melanoma in association with long-term
exposure to PUVA. J Am Acad Dermatol 2001;44:75561.
87. McKenna KE, Patterson CC, Handley J, et al. Cutaneous neoplasia following PUVA
therapy for psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 1996;134:63942.
88. Nijsten TEC, Stern RS. The increased risk of skin cancer is persistent after discontinuation
of psoralen + ultraviolet A: A cohort study. J Invest Dermatol 2003;121:2528.
89. Lindelof B. Risk of melanoma with psoralen/ultraviolet A therapy for psoriasis. Do the
known risks now outweigh the benefits? Drug Saf 1999;20:28997.
90. Markham T, Rogers S, Collins P. Narrowband UV-B (TL-01) phototherapy vs oral
8-methoxypsoralen psoralen UV-A for the treatment of chronic plaque psoriasis.
Arch Dermatol 2003;139:3258.
91. Gordon PM, Diffey BL, Matthews JN, Farr PM. A randomized comparison of narrowband TL-01 phototherapy and PUVA photochemotherapy for psoriasis. J Am Acad
Dermatol 1999;41:72832.
92. Berneburg M, Rocken M, Benedix F. Phototherapy with narrowband vs broadband UVB.
Acta Derm Venereol 2005;85:98108.
93. Weischer M, Blum A, Eberhard F, et al. No evidence for increased skin cancer risk
in psoriasis patients treated with broadband or narrowband UVB phototherapy: A first
retrospective study. Acta Derm Venereol 2004;84:3704.
94. Lebwohl M. Acitretin in combination with UVB or PUVA. J Am Acad Dermatol
1999;41:S224.
95. Tanew A, Guggenbichler A, Honigsmann H, et al. Photochemotherapy for severe
psoriasis without or in combination with acitretin: A randomized, double-blind
comparison study. J Am Acad Dermatol 1991;25:6824.
96. Spuls PI, Rozenblit M, Lebwohl M. Retrospective study of the efficacy of narrowband
UVB and acitretin. J Dermatolog Treat 2003;14 Suppl 2:1720.
97. Kampitak T, Asawanonda P. The efficacy of combination treatment with narrowband
UVB (TL-01) and acitretin vs narrowband UVB alone in plaque-type psoriasis: a
retrospective study. J Med Assoc Thai 2006;89 Suppl 3:S204.
98. Schiener R, Behrens-Williams SC, Pillekamp H, et al. Calcipotriol vs. tazarotene as
combination therapy with narrowband ultraviolet B (311 nm): efficacy in patients with
severe psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 2000;143:12758.
99. Woo WK, McKenna KE. Combination TL01 ultraviolet B phototherapy and topical
calcipotriol for psoriasis: a prospective randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial.
Br J Dermatol 2003;149:14650.
100. Ramsay CA, Schwartz BE, Lowson D, et al. Calcipotriol cream combined with twice
weekly broad-band UVB phototherapy: A safe, effective and UVB-sparing antipsoriatric
combination treatment. Dermatology 2000;200:1724.
101. Lee E, Koo J. Modern modified ultra Goeckerman therapy: a PASI assessment of a
very effective therapy for psoriasis resistant to both prebiologic and biologic therapies.
J Dermatolog Treat 2005;16:1027.
102. Asawanonda P, Nateetongrungsak Y. Methotrexate plus narrowband UVB phototherapy
versus narrowband UVB phototherapy alone in the treatment of plaque-type psoriasis:
a randomized, placebo-controlled study. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;54:10138.
103. Ho VC, Griffiths CE, Albrecht G, et al. Intermittent short courses of cyclosporin (Neoral(R))
for psoriasis unresponsive to topical therapy: a 1-year multicentre, randomized study.
The PISCES Study Group. Br J Dermatol 1999;141:28391.
104. Ho VCY, Griffiths CEM, Berth-Jones J, et al. Intermittent short courses of cyclosporine
microemulsion for the long-term management of psoriasis: A 2-year cohort study.
J Am Acad Dermatol 2001;44:64351.
105. Zachariae H, Kragballe K, Sogaard H. Methotrexate induced liver cirrhosis.
Studies including serial liver biopsies during continued treatment. Br J Dermatol
1980;102:40712.
106. Heydendael VMR, Spuls PI, Opmeer BC, et al. Methotrexate versus cyclosporine in
moderate-to-severe chronic plaque psoriasis. N Engl J Med 2003;349:65865.
44
107. Mohan N, Edwards ET, Cupps TR, et al. Demyelination occurring during antitumor necrosis factor alpha therapy for inflammatory arthritides. Arthritis Rheum
2001;44:28629.
108. Gordon K, Korman N, Frankel E, et al. Efficacy of etanercept in an integrated multistudy
database of patients with psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;54:S10111.
109. Gordon KB, Langley RG. Remittive effects of intramuscular alefacept in psoriasis.
J Drugs Dermatol 2003;2:6248.
110. Lebwohl M, Christophers E, Langley R, et al. An international, randomized, doubleblind, placebo-controlled phase 3 trial of intramuscular alefacept in patients with
chronic plaque psoriasis. Arch Dermatol 2003;139:71927.
111. Iest J, Boer J. Combined treatment of psoriasis with acitretin and UVB phototherapy
compared with acitretin alone and UVB alone. Br J Dermatol 1989;120:66570.
112. Schiener R, Brockow T, Franke A, et al. Bath PUVA and saltwater baths followed by
UV-B phototherapy as treatments for psoriasis: A randomized controlled trial. Arch
Dermatol 2007;143:58696.
113. Saurat JH, Geiger JM, Amblard P, et al. Randomized double-blind multicenter study
comparing acitretin-PUVA, etretinate-PUVA and placebo-PUVA in the treatment of
severe psoriasis. Dermatologica 1988;177:21824.
114. Actavis Group PTC EHF. Soriatane. Canadian Product Monograph. Date of preparation:
May 16, 2008.
115. Novartis Pharmaceuticals Canada, Inc. Neoral. Canadian Product Monograph.
Date of revision: October 3, 2008.
116. Wyeth Canada. Methotrexate. Canadian Product Monograph. Date of revision:
March 28, 2006.
117. Leonardi CL, Kimball AB, Papp KA, et al. Efficacy and safety of ustekinumab, a
human interleukin-12/23 monoclonal antibody, in patients with psoriasis: 76-week
results from a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (PHOENIX 1). Lancet
2008;371:166574.
118. Papp KA, Langley RG, Lebwohl M, et al. Efficacy and safety of ustekinumab, a
human interleukin-12/23 monoclonal antibody, in patients with psoriasis: 52-week
results from a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (PHOENIX 2). Lancet
2008;371:167584.
45
Key point
Large, controlled clinical studies are almost
unknown in special populations with psoriasis, so
physicians must rely largely on the case literature
and clinical judgment when treating these
patients. Guidance is provided here, but no firm
recommendations can be offered.
Psoriasis in children
Although there is limited epidemiologic data
available about psoriasis in children, it is evident that
the therapeutic challenges differ from those in adult
disease. Compared with those in adults, childrens
lesions are often smaller, thinner, and less scaly,
which can make diagnosis more difficult.1 Facial and
flexural involvement are more common in children
than in adults; this includes the special clinical variant
known as psoriatic diaper rash, which can occur up
to the age of 2 years and involves sharply demarcated,
brightly red plaques, often on the inguinal folds.1
Erythroderma and psoriatic arthritis are relatively
rare in the pediatric population. Pediatric psoriasis
also differs from adult disease in that it is more often
attributable to direct precipitating factors, which may
include trauma, infections, drugs, or stress.1
Ensuring treatment adherence in pediatric patients
poses a special challenge. Both the patient and
the caregivers may require appropriately tailored
education to convey the chronic nature of the
disease and the likelihood of lifelong follow-up
and treatment.2
Topicals
In many pediatric patients, topicals are sufficient
to control disease when combined with
conscientious skin care.1 It is recommended that,
unless the disease is widespread and associated
with significant quality-of-life issues, treatment of
psoriasis in children should start with a topical
46
Cyclosporine
Cyclosporine appears to be well tolerated in
children, with no unanticipated side effects.7,8
However, due to its potential for renal effects
and hypertension, it should be reserved for
the most severe and therapy-resistant cases in
childhood and adolescence.
Methotrexate
Good clinical responses to methotrexate
have been obtained in several studies; regular
monitoring is required to prevent hepatotoxicity
and hematotoxicity.9 There is evidence that
methotrexate can be used safely to control
severe episodes in young patients, then
withdrawn as disease subsides.9
Retinoids
Acitretin and related compounds have been
used safely and successfully in children.10,11
Long-term exposure to acitretin may lead to
premature epiphyseal closure and impaired
bone growth; therefore, regular and vigilant
follow-up is required.1 In addition, acitretin is
teratogenic and is absolutely contraindicated in
women in their reproductive years, unless they
reliably commit to using contraception during
the course of treatment and for 3 years thereafter.
Similar considerations apply to adolescent girls
and those nearing puberty.
Phototherapy
In severe, extensive, or treatment-resistant disease,
particularly in older children and adolescents,
UVB is an effective option that should be tried
before moving to more toxic therapies such as
methotrexate, retinoids, or cyclosporine.17,18 It is
best to minimize the cumulative UVB dose and
thereby limit the long-term carcinogenic risk (see
Chapter 6: Management of moderate to severe
plaque psoriasis).
UVB should be used with caution in younger
children, with due consideration of the treatments
risks and benefits.2
PUVA should likewise be used with caution in
younger patients as it is carcinogenic and may
accelerate skin aging.19
Pregnancy
Biologics
Of the biologic agents, the best studied for pediatric
psoriasis is etanercept. One large randomized
controlled trial showed that etanercept can be
effective in children from age 4 to 17 years.
Dosing was once weekly with 0.8 mg etanercept
per kg body weight, up to a maximum of 50 mg.
Significant improvements in PASI scores were
evident within 4 weeks, with 90% improvements
in PASI scores seen in approximately one-fourth
of patients by 12 weeks of treatment; 75%
improvement occurred in approximately half of
patients receiving etanercept. These benefits were
maintained up to at least 36 weeks of treatment.12
There is also preliminary evidence that in pediatric
psoriasis, etanercept therapy may allow tapering
of other treatments.13
Definition
Either:
Animal studies have revealed no evidence of harm to the fetus; however, there are
no adequate and well-controlled studies in pregnant women
or
Animal studies have shown an adverse effect, but adequate and well-controlled
studies in pregnant women have failed to demonstrate a risk to the fetus
Either:
Animal studies have shown an adverse effect and there are no adequate and
well-controlled studies in pregnant women
or
No animal studies have been conducted and there are no adequate and wellcontrolled studies in pregnant women
48
Calcipotriol
Corticosteroids
Tazarotene
Uncharacterized:
Other topical tar
products
Topicals
Therapy
Comments
49
Cyclosporine
Methotrexate
Comments
Biologics
Adalimumab
Alefacept
Etanercept
Infliximab
Systemics
Therapy
Table 2. Treatment options and risk classifications in pregnant psoriasis patients (cont.)
50
Not applicable
UVB
*See Table 1.
C: Psoralens
Powerful teratogen25
PUVA
Phototherapy
Acitretin
Systemics (cont.)
Therapy
Comments
Table 2. Treatment options and risk classifications in pregnant psoriasis patients (cont.)
51
The elderly
Elderly patients with psoriasis are more likely to
experience adverse drug reactions than younger
adults, mainly due to age-related changes to
pharmacokinetics; existing comorbidities such as
hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and hyperlipidemia,
which may limit the use of some therapeutic options;
and polypharmacy. In treating geriatric patients,
physicians must be aware of the range of interactions
that can occur between antipsoriatic agents and
other drugs.
Dermatological drugs that are predominantly
eliminated by the kidney (e.g., methotrexate) may be
eliminated more slowly in the elderly, and, therefore,
a dose reduction should be considered. Methotrexate
is also hepatotoxic and, like other such drugs, should
be used with caution in the elderly.33
Topical psoriasis treatments are often prescribed for
elderly patients as first-line therapy due to the potential
risk of adverse reactions and drug interactions caused
by polypharmacy or altered pharmacokinetics with
systemic therapy.34 Calcipotriol/betamethasone
dipropionate ointment given once daily is effective
and well tolerated in the treatment of psoriasis
regardless of the age group.34
Of the available biologic drugs, the only ones with
published findings in the elderly population are
alefacept and etanercept. Alefacept is well tolerated
and effective in elderly patients.35 Etanercept appears
to be safe for this population as well. When used
with standard dosing (25 mg subcutaneously, twice
weekly, with or without an initial dose of 50 mg twice
weekly for 12 weeks), incidence of adverse events in
the elderly was similar to that with placebo.33,36
Phototherapy is also a potentially valuable although
poorly studied option for elderly patients. Treatment
with broadband UVB two to three times per week
for 812 weeks is effective in postmenopausal
women with moderate plaque psoriasis (baseline
PASI 612).37
It is recommended that all psoriasis patients
who are candidates for therapy with a TNF-a
antagonist should be screened for HBV before
initiating treatment. In HBV-positive patients
with inactive disease, a course of antiviral
therapy is recommended, starting 24 weeks
before the TNF-a antagonist. All HBV-positive
patients receiving anti-TNF therapy should
undergo close follow-up to monitor liver
function and viral load.43
Hepatitis C
There is a lack of available data concerning
psoriasis treatment in patients with the hepatitis
C virus (HCV), but the limited findings to date
suggest that with appropriate monitoring, TNF-a
antagonists may be safe in this population.
Etanercept may act as an adjuvant to standard
antiviral therapies for hepatitis C virus (HCV),44
although at least one case study has identified
an exacerbation of hepatitis C symptoms with
etanercept therapy for RA.45 However, a larger study
of 24 HCV-positive patients receiving etanercept
or infliximab for RA showed no significant
adverse events or increases in liver enzymes or
viral load.43 A similar lack of HCV exacerbation
was seen in a separate study of two patients
whose psoriasis was treated with alefacept.46 For
HCV-positive patients treated with these biologic
agents, serum aminotransferases and HCV RNA
levels should be regularly monitored; if longterm use of the immunosuppressive therapy is
anticipated, strong consideration should be
given to a baseline liver biopsy.43
Cyclosporine may also be a useful treatment
option in patients with comorbid psoriasis and
hepatitis C, as there is in vitro evidence that
cyclosporine can suppress replication of the
hepatitis C virus. This finding is supported by a
case study in which a single patient exhibited
a dramatic improvement in his psoriasis with
cyclosporine treatment but did not experience
any exacerbation of hepatitis C symptoms.47
53
HIV-positive patients
Prior to the introduction of highly active antiretroviral
treatment (HAART), skin disease was common in
patients seropositive for the human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV).48 Psoriasis is not necessarily more
common in HIV-positive individuals than in the
general population, but the HIV-associated variant of
psoriasis is more likely to be associated with arthritis,
more resistant to treatment,49 and often more severe50
than other forms of the disease.
A significant proportion of patients with HIVassociated psoriasis will have pustular, acral
involvement, sometimes accompanied by severe,
destructive nail lesions.51 Involvement of the inguinal
creases and genitalia is also more common in people
with HIV-associated psoriasis than in the general
psoriasis population.52 Treatment of HIV-associated
genital psoriasis should follow the recommendations
outlined in Chapter 9 (Management of facial, flexural,
and genital psoriasis).
Systemics
Cyclosporine
Since HIV selectively attacks CD4+ T cells,
cyclosporine, which also suppresses CD4
cells, would not be expected to be a viable
therapeutic option. Therefore, cyclosporine
has generally been avoided in HIV-positive
patients, and its use has not been extensively
studied.56
However, there have been isolated case reports
of patients who achieved almost complete
control of psoriasis using cyclosporine, without
any signs of immune deterioration.56
Methotrexate
Methotrexate is considered to be inappropriate
for HIV-positive patients, due to several reports
of rapid progression of immunosuppression,
some with fatal outcomes. In most cases,
methotrexate was used in combination with
sulfamethoxazole and/or trimethoprim; therefore,
it is unclear whether the immunosuppressive
effects were due to the methotrexate alone, to
one of the other drugs, or to the combination.48
Antivirals
Primary treatment of HIV with the antiviral drug
zidovudine (AZT) can have secondary beneficial
effects on skin lesions, including nearly complete
or complete clearance of symptoms in up to 90%
of patients with HIV-associated psoriasis.54 The
54
Retinoids
Given the concerns about immunosuppression
associated with most other systemic therapies
in HIV-positive patients, systemic retinoids have
been particularly useful for generalized disease.51
Acitretin appears to be safe and effective
in HIV-associated psoriasis. In a pilot study
of acitretin monotherapy in 11 patients,
54% had good to excellent responses,
with 36% achieving complete clearance.
There was no evidence of a link between
baseline levels of immunosuppression and
treatment success.49
Biologics
TNF-a may be intimately involved in HIV
pathogenesis; it has been implicated in viral
propagation and lymphocyte depletion, and may
also mediate some of the clinical manifestations
of AIDS. In vitro, HIV infection has been
shown to induce TNF-a expression in cultured
cells. Conversely, exogenous TNF-a enhances
HIV replication.43
Inhibition of TNF-a in HIV-associated psoriasis
is therefore a theoretically appealing strategy
that could not only ameliorate the symptoms
of psoriasis but potentially also have antiviral
effects. However, there have been concerns that
inhibiting TNF-a in patients who are already
immunocompromised may leave them even more
vulnerable to opportunistic infections.43
Phototherapy
The use of ultraviolet light in HIV-positive patients
may at first seem counterintuitive, as both UVA
and UVB activate HIV replication in vitro.
However, the addition of psoralens to UVA has
the opposite effect in cultured cells, leading to
viral inactivation.58
In vivo, UVB therapy does not generally lead
to opportunistic infections or malignancies,48
nor is there evidence that PUVA causes viral
activation.51,58
PUVA
PUVA may be particularly useful for treatment
of thick plaques and/or palmoplantar lesions,
which are claimed to be relatively common
in HIV-associated psoriasis.51 However, this
therapeutic option should be used with caution,
due to the gastrointestinal effects of psoralens
and the potential for carcinogenesis in this
immunocompromised patient population.51
UVB
UVB is an effective treatment for psoriasis in
HIV-positive patients and is the most widely
used phototherapy in this population.51 The
response to UVB in HIV-positive individuals
is identical to that of matched seronegative
controls, and no deterioration of immune
status or other significant adverse events has
been observed.59,60
References
14. Lovell DJ, Giannini EH, Reiff A, et al. Etanercept in children with polyarticular juvenile
rheumatoid arthritis. Pediatric Rheumatology Collaborative Study Group. N Engl J Med
2000;342:7639.
15. Lovell DJ, Giannini EH, Reiff A, et al. Long-term efficacy and safety of etanercept
in children with polyarticular-course juvenile rheumatoid arthritis: interim results
from an ongoing multicenter, open-label, extended-treatment trial. Arthritis Rheum
2003;48:21826.
16. Lovell DJ, Reiff A, Jones OY, et al. Long-term safety and efficacy of etanercept in
children with polyarticular-course juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. Arthritis Rheum
2006;54:198794.
17. Jain VK, Aggarwal K, Jain K, Bansal A. Narrow-band UV-B phototherapy in childhood
psoriasis. Int J Dermatol 2007;46:3202.
18. Anonymous. New drugs for peripheral joint psoriatic arthritis. Drug Ther Bull
2006;44:15.
19. Nyfors A. Psoriasis in children. Characteristics, prognosis and therapy. A review. Acta
Derm Venereol 1981;61:4753.
20. Murase JE, Chan KK, Garite TJ, et al. Hormonal effect on psoriasis in pregnancy and
post partum. Arch Dermatol 2005;141:6016.
21. Raychaudhuri SP, Navare T, Gross J, Raychaudhuri SK. Clinical course of psoriasis
during pregnancy. Int J Dermatol 2003;42:51820.
22. Gudjonsson JE, Karason A, Runarsdottir EH, et al. Distinct clinical differences between
HLA-Cw*0602 positive and negative psoriasis patients an analysis of 1019 HLA-Cand HLA-B-typed patients. J Invest Dermatol 2006;126:7405.
23. FDA. Current categories for drug use in pregnancy. 2001.
56
24. Tauscher AE, Fleischer AB, Jr., Phelps KC, Feldman SR. Psoriasis and pregnancy.
J Cutan Med Surg 2002;6:56170.
25. Al Hammadi A, Al-Haddab M, Sasseville D. Dermatologic treatment during pregnancy:
practical overview. J Cutan Med Surg 2006;10:18392.
26. Hale EK, Pomeranz MK. Dermatologic agents during pregnancy and lactation: an update
and clinical review. Int J Dermatol 2002;41:197203.
27. Oren D, Nulman I, Makhija M, et al. Using corticosteroids during pregnancy. Are topical,
inhaled, or systemic agents associated with risk? Can Fam Physician 2004;50:10835.
28. Lam J, Polifka JE, Dohil MA. Safety of dermatologic drugs used in pregnant patients with
psoriasis and other inflammatory skin diseases. J Am Acad Dermatol 2008;59:295
315.
29. Anonymous. Retinoid drugs have a place in the treatment of psoriasis but pregnancy is an
absolute contraindication to their use. Drugs & Therapy Perspectives 2002;18:115.
30. Gunnarskog JG, Kallen AJB, Lindelof BG, Sigurgeirsson B. Psoralen photochemotherapy
(PUVA) and pregnancy. Arch Dermatol 1993;129:3203.
31. Moretti ME, Lee A, Ito S. Which drugs are contraindicated during breastfeeding?
Practice Guidelines. Can Fam Physician 2000;46:17537.
32. Stern RS, Lange R. Outcomes of pregnancies among women and partners of men with
a history of exposure to methoxsalen photochemotherapy (PUVA) for the treatment of
psoriasis. Arch Dermatol 1991;127:34750.
33. Anonymous. As there are no simple rules for dermatological drug dosing in the elderly,
titrate to suit individual response. Drugs & Therapy Perspectives 2006;22:236.
34. Parslew R, Traulsen J. Efficacy and local safety of a calcipotriol/ betamethasone
dipropionate ointment in elderly patients with psoriasis vulgaris. Eur J Dermatol
2005;15:379.
35. Gottlieb AB, Boehncke W-H, Darif M. Safety and efficacy of alefacept in elderly patients
and other special populations. J Drugs Dermatol 2005;4:71824.
36. Militello G, Xia A, Stevens SR, van Voorhees AS. Etanercept for the treatment of
psoriasis in the elderly. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;55:5179.
37. Osmancevic A, Landin-Wilhelmsen K, Larko O, et al. UVB therapy increases 25(OH)
vitamin D syntheses in postmenopausal women with psoriasis. Photodermatol
Photoimmunol Photomed 2007;23:1728.
38. Guadagnino V, Ayala F, Chirianni A, et al. Risk of hepatitis B virus infection in patients
with eczema or psoriasis of the hand. BMJ 1982;284:84.
39. Ketikoglou I, Karatapanis S, Elefsiniotis I, et al. Extensive psoriasis induced by pegylated
interferon alpha-2b treatment for chronic hepatitis B. Eur J Dermatol 2005;15:1079.
40. Kartal ED, Colak H, Ozgunes I, Usluer G. Exacerbation of psoriasis due to peginterferon
alpha-2b plus ribavirin treatment of chronic active hepatitis C. Chemotherapy
2005;51:1679.
41. Bell TM, Bansal AS, Shorthouse C, et al. Low-titre auto-antibodies predict autoimmune
disease during interferon-alpha treatment of chronic hepatitis C. J Gastroenterol
Hepatol 1999;14:41922.
42. Bottomley WW, Walton S, Keczkes K, Piercy DM. Does prior hepatitis B infection
potentiate the hepatotoxic hazard of methotrexate and azathioprine? J Dermatolog
Treat 1990;1:2634.
43. Calabrese LH, Zein N, Vassilopoulos D. Safety of antitumour necrosis factor (antiTNF) therapy in patients with chronic viral infections: hepatitis C, hepatitis B, and HIV
infection. Ann Rheum Dis 2004;63 Suppl 2:ii18ii24.
44. Zein NN. Etanercept as an adjuvant to interferon and ribavirin in treatment-naive
patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection: a phase 2 randomized, double-blind,
placebo-controlled study. J Hepatol 2005;42:31522.
45. Khanna M, Shirodkar MA, Gottlieb AB. Etanercept therapy in patients with autoimmunity
and hepatitis C. J Dermatolog Treat 2003;14:22932.
46. Thaci D, Patzold S, Kaufmann R, Boehncke WH. Treatment of psoriasis with
alefacept in patients with hepatitis C infection: a report of two cases. Br J Dermatol
2005;152:104850.
47. Imafuku S, Tashiro A, Furue M. Ciclosporin treatment of psoriasis in a patient with
chronic hepatitis C. Br J Dermatol 2007;156:13679.48.
Buchness
MR.
Treatment of skin diseases in HIV-infected patients. Dermatol Clin 1995;13:2318.
49. Buccheri L, Katchen BR, Karter AJ, Cohen SR. Acitretin therapy is effective for
psoriasis associated with human immunodeficiency virus infection. Arch Dermatol
1997;133:7115.
50. Mamkin I, Mamkin A, Ramanan SV. HIV-associated psoriasis. Lancet Infect Dis
2007;7:496.
51. Gelfand JM, Rudikoff D. Evaluation and treatment of itching in HIV-infected patients. Mt
Sinai J Med 2001;68:298308.
52. Helton JL. Genital dermatology in the HIV-infected patient. AIDS Patient Care & Stds
1997;11:23743.
53. Fife DJ, Waller JM, Jeffes EW, Koo JYM. Unraveling the paradoxes of HIV-associated
psoriasis: A review of T-cell subsets and cytokine profiles. Dermatol Online J 2007;13:4.
54. Duvic M, Crane MM, Conant M, et al. Zidovudine improves psoriasis in human
immunodeficiency virus-positive males. Arch Dermatol 1994;130:44751.
55. Townsend BL, Cohen PR, Duvic M. Zidovudine for the treatment of HIV-negative
patients with psoriasis: a pilot study. J Am Acad Dermatol 1995;32:9949.
56. Allen BR. Use of cyclosporin for psoriasis in HIV-positive patient. Lancet 1992;339:686.
57. Maurer TA, Zackheim HS, Tuffanelli L, Berger TG. The use of methotrexate for treatment
of psoriasis in patients with HIV infection. J Am Acad Dermatol 1994;31:3725.
58. Pechere M, Yerly S, Lemonnier E, et al. Impact of PUVA therapy on HIV viremia: a pilot
study. Dermatology 1997;195:845.
59. Fotiades J, Lim HW, Jiang SB, et al. Efficacy of ultraviolet B phototherapy for psoriasis
in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus. Photodermatol Photoimmunol
Photomed 1995;11:10711.
60. Meola T, Soter NA, Ostreicher R, et al. The safety of UVB phototherapy in patients with
HIV infection. J Am Acad Dermatol 1993;29:21620.
61. Fulchiero Jr GJ, Salvaggio H, Drabick JJ, et al. Eruptive latent metastatic melanomas
after initiation of antitumor necrosis factor therapies. J Am Acad Dermatol
2007;56:S65S7.
62. Paul CF, Ho VC, McGeown C, et al. Risk of malignancies in psoriasis patients treated
with cyclosporine: A 5 y cohort study. J Invest Dermatol 2003;120:2116.
63. Ly L, Czarnecki D. The rapid onset of multiple squamous cell carcinomas during
etanercept treatment for psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 2007;157:10768.
64. Saag KG, Teng GG, Patkar NM, et al. American College of Rheumatology 2008
recommendations for the use of nonbiologic and biologic disease-modifying
antirheumatic drugs in rheumatoid arthritis. Arthritis Rheum 2008;59:76284.
65. Bibbo C, Goldberg JW. Infectious and healing complications after elective orthopaedic
foot and ankle surgery during tumor necrosis factor-alpha inhibition therapy.
Foot Ankle Int 2004;25:3315.
66. den Broeder AA, Creemers MC, Fransen J, et al. Risk factors for surgical site infections
and other complications in elective surgery in patients with rheumatoid arthritis
with special attention for anti-tumor necrosis factor: a large retrospective study.
J Rheumatol 2007;34:68995.
57
Key point
Psoriasis is a chronic condition that often waxes and
wanes in severity, so long-term management is a
challenge for the treating physician. Understanding
the factors that may cause psoriatic exacerbations,
flares, and rebounds, such as environmental factors,
emotional stress, and medications, will facilitate
timely clinical intervention and reduce the risk of
life-threatening flares.
New-onset psoriasis
Infection
In children and young adults, new-onset guttate
psoriasis may be triggered by streptococcal
infections, typically streptococcal pharyngitis,
but sometimes also perianal streptococcal
cellulitis.4 Some individuals with guttate psoriasis
may progress to plaque psoriasis, and parents of
children with guttate psoriasis should be counselled
accordingly. Pure guttate psoriasis is amenable to
treatment with phototherapy and, in individuals
with clinically diagnosed streptococcal infections,
concomitant antibiotics.5 Tonsillectomy has been
suggested for patients with repeated streptococcal
infections and guttate flares as a possible means to
prevent recurrence of these episodes or progression
to plaque psoriasis.6 However, any benefits of such
an approach remain speculative.
TNF inhibitors
When used to treat rheumatoid arthritis and
other non-cutaneous inflammatory disorders,
the TNF inhibitors (infliximab, adalimumab, and
etanercept) have each been shown to induce
psoriasis in individuals with neither a personal
nor a family history of the disease. This new-onset
psoriasis may exhibit either a plaque or a pustular
morphology.7-15 Curiously, in some plaque psoriasis
patients treated with etanercept or infliximab,
the exacerbations observed have been guttate in
morphology, presenting as early as 15 days and as
late as 18 months after starting therapy.10,14
In patients with new-onset psoriasis receiving TNF
inhibitors for non-cutaneous disorders, treatment
discontinuation should be approached cautiously,
since a flare of the underlying disease could prove
58
Flares
Rebound
Conclusion
References
Recommendations
Recommendation & level
of evidence
Grade of
recommendation
Grade D
Grade D
60
33. Lewis TG, Tuchinda C, Lim HW, Wong HK. Life-threatening pustular and erythrodermic
psoriasis responding to infliximab. J Drugs Dermatol 2006;5:5468.
34. Rongioletti F, Borenstein M, Kirsner R, Kerdel F. Erythrodermic, recalcitrant psoriasis:
clinical resolution with infliximab. J Dermatolog Treat 2003;14:2225.
35. Callen JP, Jackson JH. Adalimumab effectively controlled recalcitrant generalized
pustular psoriasis in an adolescent. J Dermatolog Treat 2005;16:3502.
36. Schmick K, Grabbe J. Recalcitrant, generalized pustular psoriasis: rapid and lasting
therapeutic response to antitumour necrosis factor-alpha antibody (infliximab).
Br J Dermatol 2004;150:367.
37. Carey W, Glazer S, Gottlieb AB, et al. Relapse, rebound, and psoriasis adverse events: an
advisory group report. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;54:S17181.
38. Kamarashev J, Lor P, Forster A, et al. Generalised pustular psoriasis induced by
cyclosporin A withdrawal responding to the tumour necrosis factor alpha inhibitor
etanercept. Dermatology 2002;205:2136.
39. Yamauchi PS, Lowe NJ. Cessation of cyclosporine therapy by treatment with etanercept
in patients with severe psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;54:S1358.
40. Magliocco MA, Lozano AM, van Saders C, et al. An open-label study to evaluate the
transition of patients with chronic plaque psoriasis from cyclosporine to alefacept.
J Drugs Dermatol 2007;6:4247.
41. Hong SB, Kim NI. Generalized pustular psoriasis following withdrawal of short-term
cyclosporin therapy for psoriatic arthritis. J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol 2005;19:5223.
42. Cacoub P, Artru L, Canesi M, et al. Life-threatening psoriasis relapse on withdrawal of
cyclosporin. Lancet 1988;332:21920.
43. Lisby S, Gniadecki R. Infliximab (Remicade) for acute, severe pustular and erythrodermic
psoriasis. Acta Derm Venereol 2004;84:2478.
61
Key point
A patient-centred treatment approach is particularly
important in facial or genital psoriasis, where the
total body surface area affected is small but the
effects of social isolation and other quality-of-life
issues are profound.
Management
Plaque psoriasis generally responds well to treatment
with topical corticosteroids. However, skin tends to
be thinner in the FFG regions, posing a treatment
challenge as these areas are more sensitive to the
local side effects of these agents, such as atrophy,
telangiectasia, striae formation, bruising, and
purpura, as well as to adrenocortical suppression.6,7
Furthermore, although calcipotriol has been shown
to be efficacious when used for facial and flexural
psoriasis8 (see below), this vitamin D3 analogue
poses a risk of local skin irritation. Calcipotriol may
not be tolerated in the FFG regions, particularly those
flexural areas that naturally create some degree of
occlusion.9 For these reasons, topical calcineurin
inhibitors (TCIs) may be an appropriate choice
62
Recommendations
Recommendation & level of evidence
Grade of recommendation
Grade B
Grade B
Grade D
Grade C
Grade D
63
References
1. Park JY, Rim JH, Choe YB, Youn JI. Facial psoriasis: Comparison of patients with and
without facial involvement. J Am Acad Dermatol 2004;50:5824.
2. van de Kerkhof PCM. Textbook of psoriasis. (Blackwell Science, Oxford; Malden, MA, 1999).
3. van de Kerkhof PC, Murphy GM, Austad J, et al. Psoriasis of the face and flexures.
J Dermatolog Treat 2007;18:35160.
4. Wang G, Li C, Gao T, Liu Y. Clinical analysis of 48 cases of inverse psoriasis: a hospital-based
study. Eur J Dermatol 2005;15:1768.
5. Gribetz C, Ling M, Lebwohl M, et al. Pimecrolimus cream 1% in the treatment of
intertriginous psoriasis: a double-blind, randomized study. J Am Acad Dermatol
2004;51:7318.
6. Lebwohl M, Freeman AK, Chapman MS, et al. Tacrolimus ointment is effective for facial
and intertriginous psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol 2004;51:72330.
7. Kreuter A, Sommer A, Hyun J, et al. 1% pimecrolimus, 0.005% calcipotriol, and 0.1%
betamethasone in the treatment of intertriginous psoriasis: a double-blind, randomized
controlled study. Arch Dermatol 2006;142:113843.
8. Ortonne JP, Humbert P, Nicolas JF, et al. Intra-individual comparison of the cutaneous
safety and efficacy of calcitriol 3 microg g(-1) ointment and calcipotriol 50 microg
g(-1) ointment on chronic plaque psoriasis localized in facial, hairline, retroauricular or
flexural areas. Br J Dermatol 2003;148:32633.
64
Clinical feature
Nail matrix
Nail bed
Key point
Nail psoriasis represents a disproportionately large
challenge for patients and physicians, in view of
the small body surface area involved. Although nail
psoriasis can profoundly disrupt patients lives, the
evidence supporting most treatments is low-level.
Adherence is also an issue since nail treatment is
long-term, frequently ineffective, and sometimes
painful. Patient preferences and quality-of-life
considerations are thus central to the management
of nail psoriasis.
Topical
corticosteroids
Injected
corticosteroids
Calcipotriol
Phototherapy
Phototherapy for psoriatic nails still suffers from a lack of convincing evidence,
although small studies suggest that some patients may benefit.29,31,32 Patients may
find the treatment schedule onerous for only modest return and short remission
Topical tazarotene
Cyclosporine
Oral cyclosporine as monotherapy has shown only modest results in nail psoriasis.
The addition of topical calcipotriol to oral cyclosporine appears to improve efficacy
and delay relapse34
Biologic agents
The small but growing body of data on the biologics suggests that patients on
these therapies for skin involvement may also achieve nail benefits. Infliximab
achieved complete clearance in over half of all patients with moderate to severe
nail involvement in a large trial.38,39 In open-label studies, alefacept showed
promising results in patients with moderate to severe nail involvement36
68
Recommendations
Recommendation & level of evidence
Grade of recommendation
For moderate to severe nail psoriasis or mild nail psoriasis that affects
patient quality of life, appropriate first-line treatments include either topical
calcipotriol or topical betamethasone dipropionate plus salicylic acid
(Ref. 12, LoE 1; Ref. 17, LoE 3; Ref. 16, LoE 3)
Grade C
Grade D
Grade C
Grade C
Patients with isolated nail psoriasis should not ordinarily be considered for
systemic or phototherapy (LoE 4). However, in appropriate patients with
other psoriatic manifestations, the presence of severe or intractable nail
involvement may be a contributing factor in the decision to use any of the
following to treat plaque psoriasis affecting other areas of the skin:
Grade D
Grade A
Grade D
Grade C
Grade B
69
References
1. De Jong E, Seegers B, Gulinck MK, et al. Psoriasis of the nails associated with disability
in a large number of patients: Results of a recent interview with 1728 patients.
Dermatology 1996;193:3003.
2. Salomon J, Szepietowski JC, Proniewicz A. Psoriatic nails: a prospective clinical study.
J Cutan Med Surg 2003;7:31721.
3. Gladman DD, Anhorn KA, Schachter RK, Mervart H. HLA antigens in psoriatic arthritis.
J Rheumatol 1986;13:58692.
4. Al-Mutairi N, Manchanda Y, Nour-Eldin O. Nail changes in childhood psoriasis: A study
from Kuwait. Pediatr Dermatol 2007;24:710.
5. Williamson L, Dalbeth N, Dockerty JL, et al. Nail disease in psoriatic arthritis clinically
important, potentially treatable and often overlooked. Rheumatology 2004;43:7904.
6. Rich P, Scher RK. Nail Psoriasis Severity Index: a useful tool for evaluation of nail
psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol 2003;49:20612.
7. Leibovici V, Hershko K, Ingber A, et al. Increased prevalence of onychomycosis among
psoriatic patients in Israel. Acta Derm Venereol 2008;88:313.
8. Sanchez-Regana ML, Videla S, Villoria J, et al. Prevalence of fungal involvement in a
series of patients with nail psoriasis. Clin Exp Dermatol 2008;33:1945.
9. Grover C, Reddy BS, Chaturvedi KU. Onychomycosis and the diagnostic significance of
nail biopsy. J Dermatol 2003;30:11622.
10. Piraccini BM, Tosti A, Iorizzo M, Misciali C. Pustular psoriasis of the nails: Treatment and
long-term follow-up of 46 patients. Br J Dermatol 2001;144:10005.
11. Rigopoulos D, Gregoriou S, Katsambas A. Treatment of psoriatic nails with tazarotene
cream 0.1% vs. clobetasol propionate 0.05% cream: A double-blind study.
Acta Derm Venereol 2007;87:1678.
12. Tosti A, Piraccini BM, Cameli N, et al. Calcipotriol ointment in nail psoriasis: A controlled
double-blind comparison with betamethasone dipropionate and salicylic acid.
Br J Dermatol 1998;139:6559.
13. de Jong EM, Menke HE, van Praag MC, van de Kerkhof PC. Dystrophic psoriatic
fingernails treated with 1% 5-fluorouracil in a nail penetration-enhancing vehicle: a
double-blind study. Dermatology 1999;199:3138.
14. Scher RK, Stiller M, Zhu YI. Tazarotene 0.1% gel in the treatment of fingernail psoriasis:
a double-blind, randomized, vehicle-controlled study. Cutis 2001;68:3558.
15. Bianchi L, Soda R, Diluvio L, Chimenti S. Tazarotene 0.1% gel for psoriasis of the
fingernails and toenails: an open, prospective study. Br J Dermatol 2003;149:2079.
16. Kokelj F, Lavaroni G, Piraccini BM, Tosti A. Nail psoriasis treated with calcipotriol (MC
903): An open study. J Dermatolog Treat 1994;5:14950.
17. Zakeri M, Valikhani M, Mortazavi H, Barzegari M. Topical calcipotriol therapy in nail
psoriasis: A study of 24 cases. Dermatol Online J 2005;11:5
18. Requena L, Zamora E, Martin L. Acroatrophy secondary to long-standing applications of
topical steroids. Arch Dermatol 1990;126:10134.
19. Wolf R, Tur E, Brenner S. Corticosteroid-induced disappearing digit. J Am Acad Dermatol
1990;23:7556.
20. Jiaravuthisan MM, Sasseville D, Vender RB, et al. Psoriasis of the nail: anatomy,
pathology, clinical presentation, and a review of the literature on therapy.
J Am Acad Dermatol 2007;57:127.
21. van der Vleuten CJ, van Vlijmen-Willems IM, de Jong EM, van de Kerkhof PC.
Clobetasol-17 propionate lotion under hydrocolloid dressing (Duoderm ET) once
weekly versus unoccluded clobetasol-17-propionate ointment twice daily in psoriasis:
an immunohistochemical study on remission and relapse. Arch Dermatol Research
1999;291:3905.
70
Key point
Scalp psoriasis can cause significant psychological
and social distress. Although physicians have
a choice of several relatively effective topical
therapies, treatment success is limited by
the presence of hair, as well as by patients
unwillingness to use therapies they find
cosmetically unsatisfactory or inconvenient.
71
Corticosteroids
Although topical corticosteroids are widely used, limited clinical data are
available to support their efficacy and safety during long-term use. Corticosteroids
are available as lotions and in other formulations designed for scalp application.
Foam formulations,10-12 not presently available in Canada, have been marketed
elsewhere for scalp psoriasis
Vitamin D3
derivatives
Coal tar
Coal tar has an unpleasant smell and is difficult to apply to the scalp, although
shampoos, oils, and other acceptable formulations are available. Coal tar is
contraindicated in women who are pregnant or nursing
Anthralin
Keratolytics
510% salicylic acid has a pronounced keratolytic effect and is useful for removing
thick psoriatic scales on the scalp. When combined with a topical corticosteroid,
salicylic acid enhances skin penetration by the steroid.14 Anthralin in a urea base
is keratolytic as well and is useful for the rapid removal of thick scale15
UVB phototherapy
Since hair blocks UV light treatments from reaching the scalp, better results can
be achieved with conventional UV units if hair is parted in many rows or the head
is shaved. UV therapy is contraindicated in patients with a history of photodermatoses, photosensitive diseases, cutaneous malignancies, or immunosuppression
Retinoids
Tazarotene has been successfully used in the treatment of plaque-type psoriasis on the
body. Currently there are no published clinical data on its efficacy in the treatment of
plaque psoriasis of the scalp. Like other retinoids, tazarotene is teratogenic; while
not strictly contraindicated for topical use in women of reproductive age, it is not
recommended for use during pregnancy
72
Recommendations
Recommendation & level of evidence
Grade of recommendation
Grade A
Clobetasol propionate shampoo (Ref. 20, LoE 1++; Ref. 21, LoE 1+)
Grade A
Amcinonide lotion or fluocinonide (Ref. 22, LoE 1++; Ref. 23, LoE 1+)
Grade A
Grade B
Grade D
Grade C
Grade D
Note added in proof: In November 2008, Health Canada approved a new product containing calcipotriol
and betamethasone dipropionate in a gel formulation. This combination product is indicated for topical
treatment of moderate to severe scalp psoriasis.
References
10. Moore A, Gordon KB, Kang S, et al. A randomized, open-label trial of continuous versus
interrupted etanercept therapy in the treatment of psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol
2007;56:598603.
11. Andreassi L, Giannetti A, Milani M. Efficacy of betamethasone valerate mousse in
comparison with standard therapies on scalp psoriasis: An open, multicentre, randomized,
controlled, cross-over study on 241 patients. Br J Dermatol 2003;148:1348.
12. Bergstrom KG, Arambula K, Kimball AB. Medication formulation affects quality of life: a
randomized single-blind study of clobetasol propionate foam 0.05% compared with a
combined program of clobetasol cream 0.05% and solution 0.05% for the treatment of
psoriasis. Cutis 2003;72:40711.
13. Barnes L, Altmeyer P, Forstrom L, Stenstrom MH. Long-term treatment of psoriasis with
calcipotriol scalp solution and cream. Eur J Dermatol 2000;10:199204.
14. Hillstrom L. Comparison of topical treatment with desoxymethasone solution of 0.25%
with salicylic acid 1% and betamethasone valerate solution 0.1% in patients with
psoriasis of the scalp. J Int Med Res 1984;12:1703.
15. Hindson C. Treatment of psoriasis of the scalp. An open assessment of 0.1% dithranol
in a 17% urea base (Psoradrate). Clin Trials J 1980;17:1316.
16. Olsen EA, Cram DL, Ellis CN, et al. A double-blind, vehicle-controlled study of clobetasol
propionate 0.05% (Temovate) scalp application in the treatment of moderate to severe
scalp psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol 1991;24:4437.
73
17. Klaber MR, Hutchinson PE, Pedvis-Leftick A, et al. Comparative effects of calcipotriol
solution (50 mug/ml) and betamethasone 17-valerate solution (1 mg/ml) in the
treatment of scalp psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 1994;131:67883.
18. Katz HI, Lindholm JS, Weiss JS, et al. Efficacy and safety of twice-daily augmented
betamethasone dipropionate lotion versus clobetasol propionate solution in patients
with moderate-to-severe scalp psoriasis. Clin Ther 1995;17:390401.
19. Jarratt M, Davis JG, Giltner MP, et al. Comparative studies of augmented betamethasone
dipropionate lotion 0.05% and clobetasol propionate solution 0.05%: Correlation of the
vasoconstriction assay and clinical activity in scalp psoriasis. AdvTher 1991;8:10311.
20. Jarratt M, Breneman D, Gottlieb AB, et al. Clobetasol propionate shampoo 0.05%: a
new option to treat patients with moderate to severe scalp psoriasis. J Drugs Dermatol
2004;3:36773.
21. Griffiths CE, Finlay AY, Fleming CJ, et al. A randomized, investigator-masked clinical
evaluation of the efficacy and safety of clobetasol propionate 0.05% shampoo and
tar blend 1% shampoo in the treatment of moderate to severe scalp psoriasis.
J Dermatolog Treat 2006;17:905.
22. Ellis CN, Horwitz SN, Menter A. Amcinonide lotion 0.1% in the treatment of patients with
psoriasis of the scalp. Curr Therapeut Res Clin Exp 1988;44:31524.
23. Ellis CN, Katz HI, Rex Jr IH, et al. A controlled clinical trial of a new formulation
of betamethasone dipropionate cream in once-daily treatment of psoriasis.
Clin Ther 1989;11:76874.
24. Duweb GA, Abuzariba O, Rahim M, et al. Scalp psoriasis: Topical calcipotriol
50 mug/g/ml solution vs. betamethasone valerate 1% lotion. Int J Clin Pharmacol
Res 2000;20:658.
25. Green C, Ganpule M, Harris D, et al. Comparative effects of calcipotriol (MC903)
solution and placebo (vehicle of MC903) in the treatment of psoriasis of the scalp.
Br J Dermatol 1994;130:4837.
26. Krell J, Nelson C, Spencer L, Miller S. An open-label study evaluating the efficacy
and tolerability of alefacept for the treatment of scalp psoriasis. J Am Acad
Dermatol 2008;58:60916.
74
Key point
Palmoplantar psoriasis is significantly disabling,
especially when severe, since patients lose the
effective use of their hands and/or feet. There
are two types of palmoplantar psoriasis: localized
plaque psoriasis and palmoplantar pustular
psoriasis. Separate treatment recommendations
have been provided for each.
75
Corticosteroids
Although they are commonly used as first-line therapy, there is little clinical
evidence supporting the efficacy of topical corticosteroids in the treatment of
either plaque-type palmoplantar psoriasis or PPP. Triamcinolone acetonide and
clobetasol propionate under hydrocolloid occlusion have been used with some
success in the treatment of PPP11,12
Coal tar
Traditionally, coal tar has been used in the treatment of plaque psoriasis. Patient
preference for coal tar is low because of its smell and the difficulty in application.
Use of coal tar in an ointment base at night and covering hands and feet with
gloves and socks after application of the ointment, however, can be an acceptable
modality of treatment.13 Coal tar is contraindicated in women who are pregnant
or nursing. Coal tar is also a carcinogen and the benefits and risks of using it in
children should be carefully evaluated. There is no evidence for its effectiveness
in PPP
Vitamin D3
derivatives
Phototherapy and
photochemotherapy
Retinoids
Oral retinoids have been used with a degree of success in the treatment of PPP,
especially when combined with PUVA therapy (RePUVA).18-20 RePUVA with
acitretin (currently the only oral retinoid approved for use in psoriasis in Canada)
has not been studied systematically for palmo-plantar psoriasis21
Oral retinoids are contraindicated in women of childbearing potential unless
suitable contraception is used
Methotrexate
Cyclosporine
In patients with PPP, treatment with cyclosporine brings about significant reduction
in pustule formation, as compared with placebo22
Alefacept
76
Recommendations
Recommendation & level of evidence
Grade of recommendation
Grade B
Topical PUVA, including paint (Ref. 16, LoE 2++) and soak PUVA (Ref.
15, LoE 2++; Ref. 24, LoE 2+)
Grade B
Grade C
Other options for which weaker evidence is available may also be considered,
including moderate to ultrapotent corticosteroids (alone or in combination
with calcipotriol), tazarotene, topical calcineurin inhibitors, NB-UVB, and
intralesional triamcinolone acetonide injection (LoE 4)
Grade D
Grade D
Grade C
As second-line options in suitable patients with PPP, the physician may use
systemic agents such as cyclosporine (Ref. 25, LoE 2+) or alefacept
(Ref. 26, LoE 2+)
Grade C
Grade D
References
77
16. Sezer E, Erbil AH, Kurumlu Z, et al. Comparison of the efficacy of local narrowband
ultraviolet B (NB-UVB) phototherapy versus psoralen plus ultraviolet A (PUVA) paint for
palmoplantar psoriasis. J Dermatol 2007;34:43540.
17. Schiener R, Gottlober P, Muller B, et al. PUVA-gel vs. PUVA-bath therapy for severe
recalcitrant palmoplantar dermatoses. A randomized, single-blinded prospective study.
Photodermatol Photoimmunol Photomed 2005;21:627.
18. Lawrence CM, Marks J, Parker S, Shuster S. A comparison of PUVA-etretinate and
PUVA-placebo for palmoplantar pustular psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 1984;110:2216.
19. Rosen K, Mobacken H, Swanbeck G. PUVA, etretinate, and PUVA-etretinate therapy
for pustulosis palmoplantaris. A placebo-controlled comparative trial. Arch Dermatol
1987;123:8859.
20. Matsunami E, Takashima A, Mizuno N, et al. Topical PUVA, etretinate, and combined
PUVA and etretinate for palmoplantar pustulosis: Comparison of therapeutic efficacy
and the influences of tonsillar and dental focal infections. J Dermatol 1990;17:926.
21. Ettler K, Richards B. Acitretin therapy for palmoplantar pustulosis combined with UVA
and topical 8-MOP. Int J Dermatol 2001;40:5412.
22. Reitamo S, Erkko P, Remitz A, et al. Cyclosporine in the treatment of palmoplantar
pustulosis: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Arch Dermatol
1993;129:12739.
23. Myers W, Christiansen L, Gottlieb AB. Treatment of palmoplantar psoriasis with
intramuscular alefacept. J Am Acad Dermatol 2005;53:S127S9.
24. Gomez MI, Pirez B, Harto A, et al. 8-MOP bath PUVA in the treatment of psoriasis:
Clinical results in 42 patients. J Dermatolog Treat 1996;7:112.
25. Camacho FM, Moreno JC. Cyclosporin A in the treatment of severe atopic dermatitis
and palmoplantar pustulosis. J Dermatolog Treat 1999;10:22935.
26. Guenther LC. Alefacept is safe and efficacious in the treatment of palmar plantar
pustulosis. J Cutan Med Surg 2007;11:2025.
27. Goette DK, Morgan AM, Fox BJ, Horn RT. Treatment of palmoplantar pustulosis with
intralesional triamcinolone injections. Arch Dermatol 1984;120:31923.
78
Key point
Management of psoriasis has historically attributed
more value to physical sequelae and response
to therapy and has tended to overlook the
psychological aspects of the disease. However,
growing clinical experience and published literature
suggest that the disease burden of psoriasis extends
far beyond the physical symptoms experienced by
patients, to affect virtually all aspects of HRQL.
79
80
Interventions
Interventions to address psychosocial factors
(e.g., education, optimization of treatment
protocols, and treatment of depression) may result
in improvements in HRQL as well as in clinical
endpoints of psoriatic disease.
81
Recommendations
Recommendation & level of evidence
Grade of recommendation
Grade D
Metrics such as the PDI, DLQI, DQOLS, SF-36, or the PSA Scale should
be employed when practical, particularly in patients with self-reported
dissatisfaction in treatment response despite improvement in
clinical parameters of disease activity (LoE 4)
Grade D
Grade C
Grade C
Physicians should identify patients at risk of, or with a clear history of,
stress-induced exacerbations. Stress-management programs should be
considered for such patients (LoE 4)
Grade D
Grade D
References
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3. Al-Mazeedi K, El-Shazly M, Al-Ajmi HS. Impact of psoriasis on quality of life in Kuwait.
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4. Badia X, Mascaro JM, Lozano R. Measuring health-related quality of life in patients
with mild to moderate eczema and psoriasis: clinical validity, reliability and sensitivity to
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5. Choi J, Koo JY. Quality of life issues in psoriasis. J Am Acad Dermatol 2003;49:S5761.
6. Koo J. Population-based epidemiologic study of psoriasis with emphasis on quality of
life assessment. Dermatol Clin 1996;14:48596.
7. Zachariae R, Zachariae H, Blomqvist K, et al. Quality of life in 6497 Nordic patients with
psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 2002;146:100616.
8. Rapp SR, Feldman SR, Exum ML, et al. Psoriasis causes as much disability as other
major medical diseases. J Am Acad Dermatol 1999;41:4017.
9. Finlay AY, Coles EC. The effect of severe psoriasis on the quality of life of 369 patients.
Br J Dermatol 1995;132:23644.
10. Krueger GG, Feldman SR, Camisa C, et al. Two considerations for patients with
psoriasis and their clinicians: what defines mild, moderate, and severe psoriasis? What
constitutes a clinically significant improvement when treating psoriasis? J Am Acad
Dermatol 2000;43:2815.
11. Akay A, Pekcanlar A, Bozdag KE, et al. Assessment of depression in subjects with
psoriasis vulgaris and lichen planus. J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol 2002;16:34752.
12. Devrimci-Ozguven H, Kundakci N, Kumbasar H, Boyvat A. The depression, anxiety, life
satisfaction and affective expression levels in psoriasis patients. J Eur Acad Dermatol
Venereol 2000;14:26771.
13. Picardi A, Mazzotti E, Pasquini P. Prevalence and correlates of suicidal ideation among
patients with skin disease. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;54:4206.
14. Sampogna F, Gisondi P, Tabolli S, et al. Impairment of sexual life in patients with
psoriasis. Dermatology 2007;214:14450.
15. Gupta MA, Gupta AK. Depression and suicidal ideation in dermatology patients with acne,
alopecia areata, atopic dermatitis and psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 1998;139:84650.
16. Krueger G, Koo J, Lebwohl M, et al. The impact of psoriasis on quality of life: results
of a 1998 National Psoriasis Foundation patient membership survey. Arch Dermatol
2001;137:2804.
17. Wahl AK, Gjengedal E, Hanestad BR. The bodily suffering of living with severe psoriasis:
in-depth interviews with 22 hospitalized patients with psoriasis. Qual Health Res
2002;12:25061.
18. Heydendael VM, de Borgie CA, Spuls PI, et al. The burden of psoriasis is not determined
by disease severity only. J Investig Dermatol Symp Proc 2004;9:1315.
19. Eghlileb AM, Davies EEG, Finlay AY. Psoriasis has a major secondary impact on the lives
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82
20. Pearce DJ, Singh S, Balkrishnan R, et al. The negative impact of psoriasis on the
workplace. J Dermatolog Treat 2006;17:248.
21. Ginsburg IH, Link BG. Feelings of stigmatization in patients with psoriasis. J Am Acad
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22. Vardy D, Besser A, Amir M, et al. Experiences of stigmatization play a role in mediating
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2002;147:73642.
23. Schmid-Ott G, Jaeger B, Kuensebeck HW, et al. Dimensions of stigmatization in patients
with psoriasis in a Questionnaire on Experience with Skin Complaints. Dermatology
1996;193:30410.
24. Schmid-Ott G, Kuensebeck HW, Jaeger B, et al. Validity study for the stigmatization
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25. Gupta MA, Gupta AK, Watteel GN. Perceived deprivation of social touch in psoriasis is
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26. Ginsburg IH, Link BG. Psychosocial consequences of rejection and stigma feelings in
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27. Gupta MA, Gupta AK. Age and gender differences in the impact of psoriasis on quality
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28. Gupta MA, Gupta AK. Psoriasis and sex: A study of moderately to severely affected
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29. Buckwalter KC. The influence of skin disorders on sexual expression. Sexuality Disab
1982;5:98106.
30. Feldman SR, Fleischer AB, Jr., Reboussin DM, et al. The economic impact of psoriasis
increases with psoriasis severity. J Am Acad Dermatol 1997;37:5649.
31. Gupta MA, Gupta AK, Kirkby S, et al. A psychocutaneous profile of psoriasis patients who
are stress reactors. A study of 127 patients. Gen Hosp Psychiatry 1989;11:16673.
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33. Harvima RJ, Viinamaki H, Harvima IT, et al. Association of psychic stress with clinical
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34. Consoli SM, Rolhion S, Martin C, et al. Low levels of emotional awareness predict a
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35. Kabat-Zinn J, Wheeler E, Light T, et al. Influence of a mindfulness meditation-based
stress reduction intervention on rates of skin clearing in patients with moderate to
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36. Richards HL, Ray DW, Kirby B, et al. Response of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis
to psychological stress in patients with psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 2005;153:111420.
37. Farber EM, Lanigan SW, Rein G. The role of psychoneuroimmunology in the
pathogenesis of psoriasis. Cutis 1990;46:3146.
38. Schmid-Ott G, Jacobs R, Jager B, et al. Stress-induced endocrine and immunological
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Psychosom 1998;67:3742.
39. Harvima IT, Viinamaki H, Naukkarinen A, et al. Association of cutaneous mast cells and
sensory nerves with psychic stress in psoriasis. Psychother Psychosom 1993;60:16876.
40. Ali SM, Brodell RT, Balkrishnan R, Feldman SR. Poor adherence to treatments: a
fundamental principle of dermatology. Arch Dermatol 2007;143:9125.
41. Richards HL, Fortune DG, Griffiths CE. Adherence to treatment in patients with psoriasis.
J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol 2006;20:3709.
42. Fortune DG, Richards HL, Main CJ, Griffiths CE. What patients with psoriasis believe
about their condition. J Am Acad Dermatol 1998;39:196201.
43. Kirby B, Richards HL, Woo P, et al. Physical and psychologic measures are necessary to
assess overall psoriasis severity. J Am Acad Dermatol 2001;45:726.
44. Richards HL, Fortune DG, Weidmann A, et al. Detection of psychological distress
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45. Jobling RG. Psoriasis a preliminary questionnaire study of sufferers subjective
experience. Clin Exp Dermatol 1976;1:2336.
46. Chren MM, Lasek RJ, Quinn LM, et al. Skindex, a quality-of-life measure for
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47. Finlay AY, Kelly SE. Psoriasis an index of disability. Clin Exp Dermatol 1987;12:811.
48. Finlay AY, Khan GK. Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) a simple practical measure
for routine clinical use. Clin Exp Dermatol 1994;19:2106.
49. Kirby B, Fortune DG, Bhushan M, et al. The Salford Psoriasis Index: An holistic measure
of psoriasis severity. Br J Dermatol 2000;142:72832.
50. Lewis G, Wessely S. Comparison of the General Health Questionnaire and the Hospital
Anxiety and Depression Scale. Br J Psychiatry 1990;157:8604.
51. Scharloo M, Kaptein AA, Weinman J, et al. Patients illness perceptions and coping
as predictors of functional status in psoriasis: a 1-year follow-up. Br J Dermatol
2000;142:899907.
52. Husted JA, Gladman DD, Farewell VT, et al. Validating the SF-36 health survey
questionnaire in patients with psoriatic arthritis. J Rheumatol 1997;24:5117.
53. de Korte J, Mombers FM, Sprangers MA, Bos JD. The suitability of quality-of-life
questionnaires for psoriasis research: a systematic literature review. Arch Dermatol
2002;138:12217; discussion 7.
54. Sampogna F, Tabolli S, Soderfeldt B, et al. Measuring quality of life of patients with
different clinical types of psoriasis using the SF-36. Br J Dermatol 2006;154:8449.
55. Both H, Essink-Bot ML, Busschbach J, Nijsten T. Critical review of generic and
dermatology-specific health-related quality of life instruments. J Invest Dermatol
2007;127:272639.
56. Nichol MB, Margolies JE, Lippa E, et al. The application of multiple quality-of-life
instruments in individuals with mild-to-moderate psoriasis. Pharmacoeconomics
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57. Shikiar R, Willian MK, Okun MM, et al. The validity and responsiveness of three quality of
life measures in the assessment of psoriasis patients: results of a phase II study. Health
Qual Life Outcomes 2006;4:71.
58. Yang Y, Koh D, Khoo L, et al. The psoriasis disability index in Chinese patients:
contribution of clinical and psychological variables. Int J Dermatol 2005;44:9259.
59. Fortune DG, Richards HL, Griffiths CEM. Psychologic factors in psoriasis: consequences,
mechanisms, and interventions. Dermatol Clin 2005;23:68194.
60. Tausk F, Whitmore SE. A pilot study of hypnosis in the treatment of patients with
psoriasis. Psychother Psychosom 1999;68:2215.
61. Zachariae R, Oster H, Bjerring P, Kragballe K. Effects of psychologic intervention on
psoriasis: a preliminary report. J Am Acad Dermatol 1996;34:100815.
62. Fortune DG, Richards HL, Kirby B, et al. A cognitive-behavioural symptom management
programme as an adjunct in psoriasis therapy. Br J Dermatol 2002;146:45865.
63. Tyring S, Gottlieb A, Papp K, et al. Etanercept and clinical outcomes, fatigue, and
depression in psoriasis: double-blind placebo-controlled randomised phase III trial.
Lancet 2006;367:2935.
64. Carroll CL, Feldman SR, Camacho FT, Balkrishnan R. Better medication adherence
results in greater improvement in severity of psoriasis. Br J Dermatol 2004;151:8957.
65. Russo PAJ, Ilchef R, Cooper A. Psychiatric morbidity in psoriasis: a review.
Australas J Dermatol 2004;45:15560.
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83
Key point
People with plaque psoriasis are at a substantially
increased risk of inflammatory diseases occurring
at sites remote from the skin, including psoriatic
arthritis, cardiovascular disease, and inflammatory
bowel disease, due to common pathophysiological
mechanisms. Young patients have a threefold risk
of MI, and severe psoriasis is associated with a
3.5- to 4.4-year reduction in life expectancy in
males and females, respectively. Depression and
other affective disorders are also more common in
psoriasis patients than in the broader population.
Affective disorders
Management of comorbid depression and anxiety
is an essential component of psoriasis treatment. As
discussed in Chapter 13 (Social and psychological
aspects of psoriasis), patients should be referred to
a mental health professional if they request such
a referral or exhibit signs of clinically significant
anxiety or depression.
The use of lithium as a mood stabilizer can be
problematic in psoriasis patients because of the risk
of causing their skin disease to flare (see Chapter
8: Exacerbation and flare of psoriasis).4-6 Psoriasis
secondary to lithium treatment in a psychiatric patient
has been controlled satisfactorily with etanercept,
without the need to discontinue lithium.7
Cardiovascular disease
Psoriasis patients are at elevated risk of cardiovascular
disease8 and coronary artery calcification,9 as well
as various components of the metabolic syndrome.
The metabolic syndrome10 is associated with an
increased risk of MI and other adverse cardiovascular
outcomes.11-14
84
CHAPTER 14 - COMORBIDITIEES
85
CHAPTER 14 - COMORBIDITIEES
Psoriatic arthritis
Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is an erosive arthritis occurring
in up to 30% of psoriasis patients.35 The risk of
developing PsA is still greater in patients with more
extensive skin psoriasis.36 Joint involvement can
significantly reduce QoL relative to uncomplicated
psoriasis of comparable severity.37,38 Patients with
psoriasis should therefore be asked routinely about
joint pain and stiffness and should be treated or
considered for referral to a rheumatologist if any
signs or symptoms of PsA are found.
The pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF-a plays an
important role in the pathophysiology of both PsA
and psoriasis.35 It has been proposed that, where
possible, a single therapeutic should be used to
treat both the rheumatological and dermatological
components of PsA to minimize the risk of toxicity
that may be associated with polypharmacy.39 Agents
that are effective against both classes of symptoms
include methotrexate, cyclosporine, and the TNF
inhibitors. All of these biologic and non-biologic
options are used in uncomplicated psoriasis and
are associated with specific benefits and risks, as
outlined in Chapter 6 (Management of moderate
to severe plaque psoriasis). The TNF-a antagonists
adalimumab, etanercept, and infliximab are generally
safe and effective in PsA patients with moderate to
severe psoriasis.40-45 Methotrexate and cyclosporine
can each be effective in this population,46-48 and the
combination of these two agents has been used for
patients with recalcitrant PsA.49
Table 1. A
ntipsoriatic agents that may
exacerbate common comorbidities
Medication
Adverse reaction
Acitretin
Hypertriglyceridemia Ref. 26
Cyclosporine Hypertension
Hyperlipidemia
References
Refs. 22,
23, 25
Ref. 24
86
CHAPTER 14 - COMORBIDITIEES
Recommendations
Recommendation & level of evidence
Grade of recommendation
Grade D
Grade B
Grade A
Grade D
Grade D
Grade D
87
CHAPTER 14 - COMORBIDITIEES
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32. Kitamura K, Kanasashi M, Suga C, et al. Cutaneous reactions induced by calcium
channel blocker: high frequency of psoriasiform eruptions. J Dermatol 1993;20:27986.
33. Hu CH, Miller AC, Peppercorn R, Farber EM. Generalized pustular psoriasis provoked by
propranolol. Arch Dermatol 1985;121:13267.
34. Brauchli YB, Jick SS, Curtin F, Meier CR. Association between beta-blockers,
other antihypertensive drugs and psoriasis: population-based case-control study.
Br J Dermatol 2008;158:1299307.
35. Mease P. Management of psoriatic arthritis: the therapeutic interface between
rheumatology and dermatology. Curr Rheumatol Rep 2006;8:34854.
36. Gelfand JM, Gladman DD, Mease PJ, et al. Epidemiology of psoriatic arthritis in the
population of the United States. J Am Acad Dermatol 2005;53:573.
37. Lundberg L, Johannesson M, Silverdahl M, et al. Health-related quality of life in patients
with psoriasis and atopic dermatitis measured with SF-36, DLQI and a subjective
measure of disease activity. Acta Derm Venereol 2000;80:4304.
38. Zachariae H, Zachariae R, Blomqvist K, et al. Quality of life and prevalence of arthritis
reported by 5,795 members of the Nordic Psoriasis Associations. Data from the Nordic
Quality of Life Study. Acta Derm Venereol 2002;82:10813.
39. Gordon KB, Ruderman EM. The treatment of psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis: an
interdisciplinary approach. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;54:S8591.
40. Mease PJ, Kivitz AJ, Burch FX, et al. Etanercept treatment of psoriatic arthritis: safety,
efficacy, and effect on disease progression. Arthritis Rheum 2004;50:226472.
41. Mease PJ, Goffe BS, Metz J, et al. Etanercept in the treatment of psoriatic arthritis and
psoriasis: a randomised trial. Lancet 2000;356:38590.
42. Salvarani C, Cantini F, Olivieri I, et al. Efficacy of infliximab in resistant psoriatic arthritis.
Arthritis Rheum 2003;49:5415.
43. Antoni C, Krueger GG, de Vlam K, et al. Infliximab improves signs and symptoms of
psoriatic arthritis: results of the IMPACT 2 trial. Ann Rheum Dis 2005;64:11507.
44. Bianchi L, Giunta A, Papoutsaki M, et al. Efficacy and safety of long-term infliximab
therapy in moderate to severe psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis. Giornale Italiano di
Dermatologia e Venereologia 2006;141:738.
45. Gladman DD, Mease PJ, Ritchlin CT, et al. Adalimumab for long-term treatment of
psoriatic arthritis: forty-eight week data from the adalimumab effectiveness in psoriatic
arthritis trial. Arthritis Rheum 2007;56:47688.
46. Helliwell PS, Taylor WJ. Treatment of psoriatic arthritis and rheumatoid arthritis with
disease modifying drugs comparison of drugs and adverse reactions. J Rheumatol
2008;35:4726.
47. Salvarani C, Macchioni P, Olivieri I, et al. A comparison of cyclosporine, sulfasalazine,
and symptomatic therapy in the treatment of psoriatic arthritis. J Rheumatol
2001;28:227482.
48. Sarzi-Puttini P, Cazzola M, Panni B, et al. Long-term safety and efficacy of low-dose
cyclosporin A in severe psoriatic arthritis. Rheumatol Int 2002;21:2348.
49. Fraser AD, van Kuijk AWR, Westhovens R, et al. A randomised, double blind, placebo
controlled, multicentre trial of combination therapy with methotrexate plus ciclosporin
in patients with active psoriatic arthritis. Ann Rheum Dis 2005;64:85964.
50. Mahrle G, Schulze HJ, Brautigam M, et al. Anti-inflammatory efficacy of low-dose
cyclosporin A in psoriatic arthritis. A prospective multicentre study. Br J Dermatol
1996;135:7527.
51. Malatjalian DA, Ross JB, Williams CN, et al. Methotrexate hepatotoxicity in psoriatics:
report of 104 patients from Nova Scotia, with analysis of risks from obesity, diabetes and
alcohol consumption during long term follow-up. Can J Gastroenterol 1996;10:369
75.
52. Bernstein CN, Wajda A, Blanchard JF. The clustering of other chronic inflammatory
diseases in inflammatory bowel disease: a population-based study. Gastroenterology
2005;129:82736.
53. Yates VM, Watkinson G, Kelman A. Further evidence for an association between
psoriasis, Crohns disease and ulcerative colitis. Br J Dermatol 1982;106:32330.
54. Persson PG, Leijonmarck CE, Bernell O, et al. Risk indicators for inflammatory bowel
disease. Int J Epidemiol 1993;22:26872.
55. Schmitt JM, Ford DE. Role of depression in quality of life for patients with psoriasis.
Dermatology 2007;215:1727.
88
Key point
Although the recommendations in these Guidelines
are expected to reflect good dermatological
practice for the foreseeable future, it is possible
to anticipate some of the changes that may cause
future readers to reconsider some of the practices
described in these Guidelines.
Persistence
Advances in psoriasis research continue to yield
new approaches that promise ever more complete
control of plaque psoriasis. The developments may
well revolutionize care in coming years. However,
they are unlikely to change the fundamental need,
noted in the introduction, for active engagement
with the patient to ensure that the selected treatment
is used consistently and appropriately.47 Our hardwon insights on the limits of treatment persistence
in the real world will apply, no matter how subtly
targeted the treatment options become. Even the
most sophisticated drugs only work if the patient
uses them.
92
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93
Generic name
Abelcet
Amphotericin B
Adalat
Nifedipine
Alkeran
Melphalan
Ambisome
Amphotericin B
Amevive
Alefacept
Amphotec
Amphotericin B
Anthraforte
Anthralin
Anthranol
Anthralin
AnthraScalp
Anthralin
Apo-Atenidone
Atenolol
Apo-Atenol
Atenolol
Apo-Azathioprine
Azathioprine
Apo-Ciproflox
Ciprofloxacin
Apo-Cyclosporine
Cyclosporine
Apo-Digoxin
Digoxin
Apo-Fenofibrate
Fenofibrate
Apo-Hydroxyquine
Hydroxychloroquine sulfate
Apo-Lithium Carbonate
Lithium
Apo-Methotrexate
Methotrexate
Apo-Metoprolol
Metoprolol
Apo-Nifed
Nifedipine
Apo-Phenylbutazone;
Apo Phenylbutazone
Phenylbutazone
Apo-Propranolol
Propranolol
Apo-Sulfasalazine;
Apo Sulfasalazine
Sulfasalazine
Apo-Sulfatrim
Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole
combination product;
cotrimoxazole (also search by
names of component drugs)
Apo-Theo-La
Theophylline
Apo-Timol
Timolol
Apo-Timop
Timolol
Apo-Trimethoprim
Trimethoprim
Notes
94
Generic name
Notes
Zidovudine
Arava
Leflunomide
Aristocort
Triamcinolone
AZT
Zidovudine
BCI-Atenolol
Atenolol
Benuryl
Probenecid
Betaderm
Betamethasone
Formulated as betamethasone
valerate
Betaject
Betamethasone
Formulated as betamethasone
21-disodium phosphate plus
betamethasone acetate
Betaloc
Metoprolol
Betnesol
Betamethasone
Bezalip
Bezafibrate
Caduet
Amlodipine
Formulated as amlodipine
besylate plus atorvastatin
Carbolith
Lithium
Betamethasone
Formulated as betamethasone
sodium phosphate plus
betamethasone acetate
Cellcept
Mycophenolate mofetil
Cerebyx
Fosphenytoin sodium
Ciloxan
Ciprofloxacin
Cipro
Ciprofloxacin
Clobex
Clobetasol
CO Atenolol
Atenolol
Colchicinum
Colchicine
Combigan
Timolol
Combivir
Zidovudine
Cosopt
Timolol
Cutivate
Fluticasone propionate
Cyclocort
Amcinonide
Denorex
Coal tar
Dermovate
Clobetasol
Digibind
Digoxin
Dilantin
Phenytoin
Formulated as triamcinolone
acetonide
Formulated as betamethasone
sodium phosphate
95
Generic name
Notes
Diprolene Glycol
Betamethasone
Formulated as betamethasone
dipropionate
Diprosalic
Betamethasone
Formulated as betamethasone
dipropionate plus salicylic acid
Diprosone
Betamethasone
Formulated as betamethasone
dipropionate
Dithranol
Anthralin
Doak Oil
Coal tar
Dom-Fenofibrate
Fenofibrate
Dom-Metoprolol
Metoprolol
Dom-Propranolol
Propranolol
Dom-Timolol
Timolol
Dovobet
Calcipotriol/betamethasone
combination product (also search
by names of component drugs)
Dovonex
Calcipotriol
Duotrav
Timolol
Duralith
Lithium
Efudex
Fluorouracil
Elidel
Pimecrolimus
Enbrel
Etanercept
Exorex
Coal tar
Fenomax
Fenofibrate
Fluoroplex
Fluorouracil
Fungizone
Amphotericin B
Gen-Azathioprine
Azathioprine
Gen-Clobetasol
Clobetasol
Gen-Hydroxychloroquine
Hydroxychloroquine sulfate
Gen-Metoprolol
Metoprolol
Gluconorm
Repaglinide
Humira
Adalimumab
Hydrea
Hydroxyurea
Imuran
Azathioprine
Inderal
Propranolol
Kenalog
Triamcinolone
Lanoxin
Digoxin
Formulated as betamethasone
dipropionate plus calcipotriol
Formulated as triamcinolone
acetonide
96
Generic name
Notes
Lidemol
Fluocinonide
Lidex
Fluocinonide
Lipidil
Fenofibrate
Lithane
Lithium
Lithium Benziocum
Lithium
Lithium Carbonicum
Lithium
Lopresor
Metoprolol
Lyderm
Fluocinonide
Coal tar
Medi-Dan Shampoo
Coal tar
Med-Timolol
Timolol
Metoject
Methotrexate
Coal tar
Neoral
Cyclosporine
Nerisalic
Diflucortolone valerate
Nerisone
Diflucortolone valerate
Norvasc
Amlodipine
Novo-Azathioprine
Azathioprine
Novo-AZT
Zidovudine
Novo-Chloroquine
Chloroquine
Novo-Clobetasol
Clobetasol
Novo-Fenofibrate
Fenofibrate
Novo-Metoprol
Metoprolol
Novo-Phenytoin
Phenytoin
Novo-Pranol
Propranolol
Novo-Theophyl
Theophylline
Novo-Timol
Timolol
Novo-Trimel
Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole
combination product;
cotrimoxazole (also search by
names of component drugs)
Nu-Cotrimox
Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole
combination product;
cotrimoxazole (also search by
names of component drugs)
97
Generic name
Nu-Fenofibrate
Fenofibrate
Nu-Metop
Metoprolol
Nu-Propranolol
Propranolol
Nu-Timol
Timolol
Notes
Coal tar
P&S Plus
Coal tar
Pekana-colchicinum
Colchicine
Pentrax
Coal tar
PHL-Lithium Carbonate
Lithium
PHL-Fenofibrate
Fenofibrate
PHL-Metoprolol
Metoprolol
Plaquenil
Hydroxychloroquine sulfate
Plendil
Felodipine
PMS-Bezafibrate
Bezafibrate
PMS-Lithium Carbonate
Lithium
PMS-Digoxin
Digoxin
PMS-Metoprolol
Metoprolol
PMS-Polytrimethoprim
Trimethoprim
PMS-Propranolol
Propranolol
PMS-Sulfasalazine
Sulfasalazine
PMS-Theophylline
Theophylline
PMS-Timolol
Timolol
PMS-Vancomycin
Vancomycin
Prevex B
Betamethasone
Pro-Hydroxyquine
Hydroxychloroquine sulfate
Protopic
Tacrolimus
Protrin
Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole
combination product;
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Psoriasin
Coal tar
Pulmophylline
Theophylline
Purinethol
Mercaptopurine
Rambazole
Talarozole
Raptiva
Efalizumab
Formulated as trimethoprim
sulfate plus polymyxin B sulfate
Formulated as betamethasone
valerate
98
Generic name
Notes
Ratio-Amcinonide
Amcinonide
Ratio-Clobetasol
Clobetasol
Ratio-Ectosone
Betamethasone
Ratio-Fluticasone
Fluticasone propionate
Ratio-Methotrexate Sodium
Methotrexate
Ratio-Theo-Bronc
Theophylline
Ratio-Topilene
Betamethasone
Formulated as betamethasone
dipropionate
Ratio-Topisalic
Betamethasone
Formulated as betamethasone
dipropionate plus salicylic acid
Ratio-Topisone
Betamethasone
Formulated as betamethasone
dipropionate
Ratio-Triacomb
Triamcinolone
Formulated as triamcinolone
acetonide plus gramicidin,
neomycin sulfate, and nystatin
Remicade
Infliximab
Renedil
Felodipine
Retrovir
Zidovudine
Rhoxal-Timolol
Timolol
Riva-Metoprolol
Metoprolol
Rivasone Scalp
Betamethasone
Formulated as betamethasone
valerate
Rolene
Betamethasone
Formulated as betamethasone
dipropionate
Rosone
Betamethasone
Formulated as betamethasone
dipropionate
S J Liniment
Coal tar
Salazopyrin
Sulfasalazine
Sandoz Cyclosporine
Cyclosporine
Sandoz Felodipine
Felodipine
Sandoz Metoprolol
Metoprolol
Sandoz Timolol
Timolol
Sebcur
Coal tar
Septra
Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole
combination product;
cotrimoxazole (also search by
names of component drugs)
Soriatane
Acitretin
Formulated as betamethasone
valerate
99
Generic name
Notes
Stelara
Ustekinumab
Sterex
Coal tar
Coal tar
Tardan
Coal tar
Targel
Coal tar
Taro-Sone
Betamethasone
Taro-Amcinonide
Amcinonide
Taro-Clobetasol
Clobetasol
Taro-Phenytoin
Phenytoin
Tazorac
Tazarotene
Tegison
Etretinate
Coal tar
Theraderm
Triamcinolone
Tiamol
Fluocinonide
Topactin
Fluocinonide
Topsyn
Fluocinonide
Trasicor
Oxprenolol
Tremytoin
Phenytoin
Triaderm
Triamcinolone
Formulated as triamcinolone
acetonide
Trizivir
Zidovudine
Ultravate
Halobetasol propionate
Vancocin
Vancomycin
Vepesid
Etoposide
Viaderm KC
Triamcinolone
Formulated as triamcinolone
acetonide plus gramicidin,
neomycin sulfate, and nystatin
Xamiol
Calcipotriol/betamethasone
combination product (also search
by names of component drugs)
Formulated as betamethasone
dipropionate plus calcipotriol
Coal tar
Zanidip
Lercanidipine
Zym-Metoprolol
Metoprolol
Discontinued in 2007
100