10 research outputs found
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The landscape of psoriasis provision in the UK.
Psoriasis remains one of the commonest conditions seen in dermatological practice, and its treatment is one of the greatest cost burdens for the UK National Health Service. Treatment of psoriasis is complex, with numerous overlapping lines and therapies used in combination. This complexity reflects the underlying pathophysiology of the disease as well as the heterogeneous population that it affects. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidance for the treatment of psoriasis has been available since 2013, and has been the subject of three national audits conducted by the British Association of Dermatologists. This report synthesizes the results of the most recent of those exercises and places it in the context of the NICE guidance and previous audits. It clearly shows the significant burden of disease, issues with provision of services and long waiting times and the marked shift in therapies towards targeted biologic therapies
British Association of Dermatologists National Clinical Audit on the Management of Hidradenitis Suppurativa in the UK.
BACKGROUND: The first UK guidelines for the management of hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) were published by the British Association of Dermatologists (BAD) in 2018. The guidelines contained a set of audit criteria. AIM: To evaluate current HS management against the audit standards in the BAD guidelines. METHODS: BAD members were invited to complete audit questionnaires between January and May 2020 for five consecutive patients with HS per department. RESULTS: In total, 88 centres participated, providing data for 406 patients. Disease staging using the Hurley system and disease severity using a validated tool during follow-ups was documented in 75% and 56% of cases, respectively, while quality of life and pain were documented in 49% and 50% of cases, respectively. Screening for cardiovascular disease risk factors was as follows: smoking 75%, body mass index 27% and others such as lipids and diabetes 57%. Screening for depression and anxiety was performed in 40% and 25% of cases, respectively. Support for smokers or obese patients was documented in 35% and 23% of cases. In total, 182 patients were on adalimumab, of whom 68% had documentation of baseline disease severity, and 76% were reported as having inadequate response or contraindications to systemic treatments; 44% of patients continued on adalimumab despite having <Â 25% improvement in lesion count. CONCLUSION: UK dermatologists performed well against several audit standards, including documenting disease staging at baseline and smoking status. However, improvements are needed, particularly with regard to screening and management of comorbidities that could reduce the long-term complications associated with HS. A re-audit is required to evaluate changes in practice in the future
Comparing the efficacy and tolerability of biologic therapies in psoriasis: an updated network meta-analysis
Background
The rapid expansion of psoriasis biologics has led to an urgent need to understand their relative efficacy and tolerability to inform treatment decisions better and, specifically, to inform guideline development.
Objectives
To update a 2017 metaâanalysis on the comparative efficacy and tolerability of biologic treatments for psoriasis.
Methods
We searched the MEDLINE, PubMed, Embase and Cochrane databases for randomized controlled trials (RCTs), published up to 7 September 2018, of 11 licensed, NICEâapproved biologics targeting tumour necrosis factor (adalimumab, etanercept, infliximab, certolizumab pegol), interleukin (IL)â12/ILâ23p40 (ustekinumab), ILâ17A (secukinumab, ixekizumab), ILâ17RA (brodalumab) and ILâ23p19 (guselkumab, tildrakizumab, risankizumab). A frequentist network metaâanalysis ascertained direct or indirect evidence comparing biologics with one another, methotrexate or placebo. This was combined with hierarchical cluster analyses to consider efficacy (â„ 90% improvement in Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI 90) or Physicianâs Global Assessment 0 or 1; PASI 75; Dermatology Life Quality Index improvement) and tolerability (drug withdrawal due to adverse events) outcomes at 10â16 weeks, followed by assessments of study quality, heterogeneity and inconsistency.
Results
We identified 62 RCTs presenting data on direct comparisons (31 899 participants). All biologics were efficacious compared with placebo or methotrexate at 10â16 weeks. Hierarchical cluster analyses revealed that adalimumab, brodalumab, certolizumab pegol, guselkumab, risankizumab, secukinumab, tildrakizumab and ustekinumab were comparable with respect to high shortâterm efficacy and tolerability. Infliximab and ixekizumab clustered together, with high shortâterm efficacy but relatively lower tolerability than the other agents, although the number of drug withdrawal events across the network was low, so these findings should be treated with caution.
Conclusions
Using our methodology we found that most biologics cluster together with respect to shortâterm efficacy and tolerability, and we did not identify any single agent as âbestâ. These data need to be interpreted in the context of longerâterm efficacy, effectiveness data, safety, posology and drug acquisition costs when making treatment decisions.</p
Comparing the efficacy and tolerability of biologic therapies in psoriasis: an updated network meta-analysis
Background
The rapid expansion of psoriasis biologics has led to an urgent need to understand their relative efficacy and tolerability to inform treatment decisions better and, specifically, to inform guideline development.
Objectives
To update a 2017 metaâanalysis on the comparative efficacy and tolerability of biologic treatments for psoriasis.
Methods
We searched the MEDLINE, PubMed, Embase and Cochrane databases for randomized controlled trials (RCTs), published up to 7 September 2018, of 11 licensed, NICEâapproved biologics targeting tumour necrosis factor (adalimumab, etanercept, infliximab, certolizumab pegol), interleukin (IL)â12/ILâ23p40 (ustekinumab), ILâ17A (secukinumab, ixekizumab), ILâ17RA (brodalumab) and ILâ23p19 (guselkumab, tildrakizumab, risankizumab). A frequentist network metaâanalysis ascertained direct or indirect evidence comparing biologics with one another, methotrexate or placebo. This was combined with hierarchical cluster analyses to consider efficacy (â„ 90% improvement in Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI 90) or Physicianâs Global Assessment 0 or 1; PASI 75; Dermatology Life Quality Index improvement) and tolerability (drug withdrawal due to adverse events) outcomes at 10â16 weeks, followed by assessments of study quality, heterogeneity and inconsistency.
Results
We identified 62 RCTs presenting data on direct comparisons (31 899 participants). All biologics were efficacious compared with placebo or methotrexate at 10â16 weeks. Hierarchical cluster analyses revealed that adalimumab, brodalumab, certolizumab pegol, guselkumab, risankizumab, secukinumab, tildrakizumab and ustekinumab were comparable with respect to high shortâterm efficacy and tolerability. Infliximab and ixekizumab clustered together, with high shortâterm efficacy but relatively lower tolerability than the other agents, although the number of drug withdrawal events across the network was low, so these findings should be treated with caution.
Conclusions
Using our methodology we found that most biologics cluster together with respect to shortâterm efficacy and tolerability, and we did not identify any single agent as âbestâ. These data need to be interpreted in the context of longerâterm efficacy, effectiveness data, safety, posology and drug acquisition costs when making treatment decisions.</p
British Association of Dermatologists guidelines for biologic therapy for psoriasis 2020: A rapid update
The overall aim of the guideline is to provide upâtoâdate, evidenceâbased recommendations on the use of biologic therapies targeting TNF (adalimumab, etanercept, certolizumab pegol, infliximab), IL12/23p40 (ustekinumab), IL17A (ixekizumab, secukinumab), IL17RA (brodalumab) and IL23p19 (guselkumab, risankizumab, tildrakizumab) in adults, children and young people for the treatment of psoriasis; consideration is given to the specific needs of people with psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis
British Association of Dermatologists guidelines for biologic therapy for psoriasis 2017
The overall aim of the guideline is to provide evidence-based recommendations on the use of biologic therapies (adalimumab, etanercept, infliximab, ixekizumab, secukinumab and ustekinumab) in adults, children and young people for the treatment of psoriasis; consideration is given to the specific needs of people with psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis. Biologic therapies have now been in use for over 10 years, and with accrued patient-years exposure and clinical experience, many areas that were covered in previous versions of the guideline are now part of the Summary of Product Characteristics (SPC) and/or routine care so that specific recommendations are redundant (see Toolkit A: Summary of licensed indications and posology for biologic therapy, in Supporting information 2). Therefore, in this update we focus on areas where there has been a major change in the evidence base or clinical practice, where practice is very varied and/or where clear consensus or guidelines are lacking (see section 3.1 in Supporting information 1)