Background: The International Psoriasis Council (IPC) updated the classification of psoriasis severity to guide clinical decision-making. According to IPC guidelines, patients are considered candidates for systemic therapy when body surface area (BSA) is >10%, when lesions affect special body areas (ie, face, palms, soles, genitals, scalp, or nails), or when topical therapy fails to control symptoms.
Objective: To evaluate patient candidacy for systemic therapy in real-world settings, according to disease severity criteria.
Methods: This cross-sectional study included systemic treatment-naive patients from the CorEvitas Psoriasis Registry who initiated systemic treatment at Registry visits between April 2015 and April 2023. Based on IPC criteria, systemic therapy candidates were identified, and data on demographics and clinical characteristics, including disease severity indicators (ie, BSA and Psoriasis Area Severity Index [PASI] scores) and patient-reported outcome measures, were collected and descriptively summarized.
Results: The analysis included 2739 systemic therapy initiators with plaque psoriasis, of whom 82.7% met IPC criteria for systemic therapy. Of the 2265 systemic therapy candidates, 56.2% had a BSA >10%, 53.2% had a history of psoriasis affecting special areas, and 55.2% had prior but not current use of topical therapy. Notably, 71.0% of candidates for systemic therapy had PASI scores ≤12.
Conclusion: In this large real-world study, most patients with psoriasis who initiated systemic therapy met the IPC disease severity criteria to do so. Disease severity categorization based on PASI scores and BSA percentage alone may not adequately capture all patients who might be candidates for systemic psoriasis treatment.
Clinicaltrialsgov: NCT02707341.
Keywords: clinical guidelines; cross-sectional studies; disease severity; psoriasis registry; skin and connective tissue diseases.
© The Author(s) 2024.