AI Article Synopsis

  • Psoriasis in special areas, like the scalp and nails, significantly impacts patients' quality of life and is often poorly managed with regular topical treatments.
  • The PROMINENT study showed that using apremilast alongside existing topical therapies improves the condition in Japanese patients with mild to moderate plaque psoriasis, with notable efficacy in scaling and quality of life.
  • Results indicated that a significant percentage of patients saw improvement after 32 weeks of treatment, with similar incidents of side effects across varying severity levels of psoriasis.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Psoriasis involvement in special areas (e.g., scalp or nails) is associated with a great disease burden yet it is often inadequately treated with topical treatments. The efficacy and tolerability of apremilast plus existing topical therapy in Japanese patients with mild to moderate plaque psoriasis were demonstrated in PROMINENT, a phase 3b, multicenter, open-label, single-arm study. We evaluated the efficacy of apremilast across disease severities and special areas involved in these patients.

Methods: In PROMINENT, patients received apremilast 30 mg twice daily for 16 weeks in addition to their existing topical therapy, with the option of topical therapy reduction at the discretion of their physician while continuing apremilast treatment from Weeks 16 to 32. We performed a post hoc analysis, assessing apremilast efficacy and safety in Japanese patients stratified by baseline static Physician Global Assessment (sPGA) score (2 [mild] or 3 [moderate]) and special area involvement.

Results: Of patients with baseline sPGA = 2 and sPGA = 3, 62.7% and 30.7%, respectively, achieved sPGA score 0 or 1 at Week 32. At Week 32, improvements in skin, nail, scalp, and quality of life assessments were observed regardless of baseline sPGA score. Improvements in these endpoints at Week 32 were also observed in patients with special area (scalp or nail) involvement (n = 134). Incidence of adverse events was similar between patients with baseline sPGA = 2 and sPGA = 3.

Conclusions: Apremilast in combination with topical therapy may be a beneficial treatment for Japanese patients, who have limited systemic treatment options for mild to moderate psoriasis or psoriasis in special areas.

Trial Registration: NCT03930186.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11169178PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13555-024-01179-zDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

topical therapy
16
special area
12
japanese patients
12
spga score
12
efficacy apremilast
8
patients
8
special areas
8
existing topical
8
mild moderate
8
patients baseline
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!