Efficacy and survival of biologic agents in psoriasis: a practical real-life 12-year experience in a French dermatology department
2018; Informa; Volume: 30; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/09546634.2018.1480746
ISSN1471-1753
AutoresHélène Roche, Kévin Bouiller, E. Puzenat, E. Deveza, Blandine Roche, F. Pelletier, A. van de Laak, Anne Sophie Dupond, Charlée Nardin, F. Aubin,
Tópico(s)Rheumatoid Arthritis Research and Therapies
ResumoBackground: Drug survival in a real-life setting is critical to long-term use of biologics for psoriasis.Objective: We describe our 12-year experience with biologics in psoriasis patients.Patients and Methods: All patients treated with biologics including infliximab, adalimumab (ADA), etanercept (ETA), and ustekinumab (UST) for psoriasis vulgaris between January 2005 and December 2016 were retrospectively analyzed.Results: In total, 545 treatment series were administered to 269 patients, including 211 treatment series with ADA, 135 with ETA, 77 with infliximab, and 122 with UST. ADA and ETA were initiated most often as first-line therapy; 65.3% of treatment sequences were discontinued. UST had the highest drug survival. The major reason for treatment termination was a loss of efficacy (44.9%). Definitive discontinuation increased with the number of biologic therapy sequences.Limitations: Subjects were not randomized to the different treatments.Conclusions: In a long-term real-life setting, drug survival of UST is better than that of TNF-a inhibitors for both biologic-naive and biologic-experienced patients with psoriasis.
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