Title: Overview of Psoriasis
1Overview of Psoriasis
- Adam O. Goldstein, MD, MPH
- Associate Professor
- UNC Department of Family Medicine
- Email aog_at_med.unc.edu
2Objectives
- 1. Differentiate psoriasis types
- 2. Form differential dx
- 3. Review tx guidelines
- 4. Review new products
- 5. Learn 2 additional patient education pearls
3I am silvery, scaly. Puddles of flakes form
wherever I rest my flesh.... Lusty, though we are
loathsome to love. Keen-sighted, though we hate
to look upon ourselves. The name of the disease,
spiritually speaking, is.
Humiliation
4Psoriasis Incidence
- 2-3 U.S. (6.4 million)
- 200,000 new cases/year
- 300,000 have gt20 BSA
- Median age dx 30
- Two peaks 16-22, 57-60
- Costs 2 billion/year
- Mean per patient costs 3000
(Javitz, J Am Acad Dermatol, 2002)
5Psoriasis Quality of Life
- 50 seek treatment
- As debilitating as other chronic illnesses
- gt rates depression alcohol abuse
- (Sharma, J Dermatol, 2001)
-
6Case
- Bob- 34 yo insurance executive
- history of psoriasis for 8 years
- scalp, elbows, knees and trunk
- Got topical steroid (Psorcon E, 60 gms) from
dermatologist 3 years ago - helped with itching
- Wants a renewal and wonders if needs to see a
dermatologist - You estimate 5-10 involvement of skin with
plaque psoriasis
7Case
- What is your treatment plan?
- Do you refer him to a dermatologist?
8Psoriasis
- Definition
- Chronic, remitting and relapsing
- Scaly and inflammatory
- Genetically influenced
9Psoriasis
- Morphology Circumscribed, thickened, plaques
with secondary erythema and thick, silvery scales
10Psoriasis Pathogenesis
- Hyperproliferation of the epidermis
- Normal skin cell matures in 28-30 days
- Psoriatic skin cell matures in 3-6 days
11Psoriasis Types
- Plaque-typeLocalized or
Generalized - PustularLocalized or Generalized
12Psoriasis
- Arthritis associated (5-7)
13Psoriasis Distribution
- (From Pardasan AG, et al. Am Fam Physician 2000)
14Psoriasis Distribution
15Psoriasis Distribution
16Psoriasis Distribution
17Psoriasis Distribution
18Psoriasis Distribution
19Psoriasis Distribution
20Psoriasis Distribution
- Intertriginous/inverse- armpits, groin, under
breasts (less thick silveryscale)
21Psoriasis Distribution
- Guttate-small red dots (Gutta drops)
- Appears suddenly after a strep, URI, other
infection, stress, medications
22Psoriasis Guttate
- Appears after strep, URI, stress,
medica-tions
23Psoriasis Distribution
- Erythrodermic
- Widespread erythema, itching, pain, edema
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25Psoriasis Distribution
- Sites of trauma (Koebners phenomenon)
26Psoriasis Diagnosis
- Early on, may look like other diseases
- Bx may be necessary
27Psoriasis Differential Diagnosis
28Psoriasis Differential Diagnosis
29Psoriasis Differential Diagnosis
- Seborrhea Finer scale, central facial, scalp,
central chest Greasier Sebopsoriasis
30Psoriasis Differential Diagnosis
- dermatophyte infections (Tinea)
- KOH negative
- scale not as thick or silvery
31Psoriasis Differential Dx
- intertriginous diaper dermatitis/candidiasis
- satellite pustules, beefy red, maceration KOH
positive for yeast in candidiasis may coexist
32Psoriasis Differential Diagnosis
- Eczema
- Neuro-dermatitis/
lichen simplex
chronicus
33Psoriasis Differential Dx
34Psoriasis Differential Diagnosis
35Psoriasis Differential Diagnosis
36Psoriasis Differential Diagnosis
- Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma
37Psoriasis Principals of Treatment
- Individualize treatment based on
- self-image, symptoms, interference with social
interactions, expectations scientific evidence - Patient education Control, not cure
- Pearl
- Combine products for better long-term control and
fewer SEs
(Rees, J Am Acad Dermatol, 2003 )
38Psoriasis Treatment
- Flares
- skin injury (including dryness, scratching)
- sunburn
- infections (strep, HIV)
- psychological stress
- medications
39Psoriasis Treatment
- Medications linked to psoriatic flares
- Lithium
- Beta blockers
- ACE inhibitors
- Antimalarials
- Indomethacin
40Psoriasis Pearl
- Avoid systemic corticosteroids
41Psoriasis Treatment
- lt5 sunlight topical tx
- 5-20 sunlight topical tx /- systemic
- gt20 systemic tx /- light therapy
42Psoriasis Treatment
43 Evidence-based medicine
- No good evidence that non-drug txs work
- Topical txs effective in short-term (few
comparative RCTs) - RCTs show UVB and PUVA effective short/long term
(long term risk PUVA-SCCa) - Cyclosporin clears short term but toxic
(BMJ, Clinical Evidence 2001)
44Psoriasis lt 20 BSATopical Therapies
- 1. Emollients
- 2. Keratolytic agents
- 3. Topical steroids
- 4. Calcipotriene
- 5. Tazarotene gel
- 6. Topical calcineurin inhibitors
- 7. Anthralin
- 8. Coal tar
- ( BMJ 2001)
451. Emollient cleansers and lotions/cream
- Mild cleansers
- Moisturizers
462. Keratolytic Agents
- WHEN THE SCALE IS REALLY THICK
- Scalp P S liquid
- Body 2-10 salicylic
acid qd- bid
473. Topical Corticosteroids
- Never treated-
- start medium potency
- follow up in 2 weeks
- Previously treated
- start high potency
- 2-4 weeks, then taper
- Always use lower potencies on face and
intertriginous areas
483. Topical Corticosteroids
- Creams most body parts
- Lotions/mousse hairy areas
- Ultrapotent/potent BID 2-3 weeks to thick lesions
- Taper to weekend use only or
- Taper to Class III for maintenance to avoid
atrophy/striae - Educate on
- tolerance, signs of atrophy, tapering
relapse - If topical steroids insufficient
- Steroids occlusion (plastic wrap QHS- if no
atrophy) - Steroids calcipotriene cream/ointment or
tazarotene gel - Coal tar products and/or Anthralin
- (Tristani-Firouzi, Cutis, 1998)
49Intralesional injections
- Isolated recalcitrant lesions
- TAC 3-10mg/cc
- in NS to plaques lt 3 cm
504. Calcipotriene 0.005 (cream, ointment,
solution)
- Calcipotriene (Dovonex)
- simulates differentiation
- inhibits proliferation
- gt effective as steroids, tar, anthralin
- gt irritation than steroids
- Use cautiously if renal or calcium-related
conditions, especially (lt 60 gm/week) - Use gt 4 wks to determine effectiveness
(BMJ 2001)
514. Calcipotriene 0.005
- Use with potent topical corticosteroid
(halobetasol) BID x 2-4 weeks - less potent topical corticosteroids for facial or
groin use - may apply simultaneously
- Continue calcipotriene use BID and taper
corticosteroid use to weekends only - Helps prevent rebound flares
- Helps avoid atrophy
- Taper off steroid first, then calcipotriene
- (Koo, Skin Aging 2002)
525. Tazarotene Topical Gel/ Cream
- Tazarotene (Tazorac)
- Mechanism of action not well defined
- Vitamin A derived
- Inhibits cornified envelope formation
- Suppresses inflammation in the epidermis
535. Tazarotene Topical Gel (0.05-0.1 )
- Use with medium- high potency topical steroids
QD-BID and Tazarotene gel QHS - (63 post-treat flare with steroids alone
vs 14 steroids tazarotene) - After 2-4 weeks, gradually decrease potent
topical steroids to weekend use only - Continue or slowly taper tazarotene gel
- (Koo, J Am Acad Dermatol 2000)
545. Tazarotene Topical Gel/Cream
- Educate
- apply very small amount to center of plaques
- initial increased erythema and scaling
- confine application to plaques
- do not chase erythema
- Pregnancy Do not use
- Use for gt 4-6 weeks before discontinuing
556. Steroid Sparing
- Topical calcineurin inhibitors
- Tacrolimus ointment Pimecrolimus cream
- Facial and intertriginous areas
- (Freeman, J Am Acad Dermatol, 2003)
56Tacrolimus ointment Pimecrolimus cream
- Safety?
- In 2005, FDA warnings about possible link between
topical calcineurin inhibitors and cancer (? inc
risk of lymphoma and skin cancers) - No definite causal relationship
- FDA recommends these agents only as second-line
therapy in patients unresponsive to or intolerant
of other treatments - Use for short periods of time and minimum amount
- Avoid continuous use
577. Anthralin
- Antimitotic reducing agent
- Short-contact therapy
- Creams
- Drithocreme 0.1,0.25,0.5, 1
- Micanol 1
- Psoriatec 1
- Ointment
- Anthraderm 0.1,0.25,0.5, 1
- Micanol does not stain skin if rinsed with cool
to lukewarm water - Use daily until skin is smooth (2-4 weeks)
- (Koo, Skin Aging, 2002)
588. Coal Tar
- Useful as an antimitotic agent
- Folliculitis, Staining, Photosensitizer, Smell
- Dozens of products
59Algorithm for Treatment of Localized Psoriasis
(From Pardasan AG, et al. Am Fam Physician 2000)
60Scalp Psoriasis
- Medicated shampoos 5-10 minutes daily
- keratolytics (salicylic acid)
- coal tar based
- Topical steroids in lotion or solution form
- Class I to II lotion or scalp
application, tapering to - Class III lotion, solution, oil
- Calcipotriene solution
- Use qhs in addition to topical corticosteroids
(Van der Vleuten, Drugs, 2001)
61Scalp Psoriasis
- Topical corticosteroids in mousse
- BMV foam (Luxiq)-may be used on nonfacial/genital
areas - Used qd-bid, less often with improvement
- Foam superior efficacy preferred by patients
compared with lotion
(Franz, Int J Dermatol 1999)
62Genital Psoriasis
- Mid potency steroids can be use cautiously and
for limited time - short-term mometasone
- Reduce to low-potency creams asap
- desonide cream
- Consider compounding hydrocortisone 2.5 cream
and ketoconazole (Nizoral) cream , - Cautious use of calcipotriene
- Cautious use of anthralin
- (Lebwoh, J Am Acad Dermatol 2001)
63Nail Psoriasis
- topical fluorouracil qhs
- tazarotene gel 0.1 qhs
- class I-II topical steroids
- posterior nailfold intralesional Kenalog 5-10
mg/cc - methotrexate
(Van Laborde, Dermatol Clin, 2000)
64Topical Treatments
- GIVE ENOUGH WITH REFILLS!
- BE AWARE OF !
65Generalized plaque-type psoriasis gt20 BSA
- Ultraviolet light UVB or PUVA (oxpsoralens
photosensitizer UVA) - Methotrexate
- Retinoids Acitretin/ Etretinate
- Sulfasalazine
- Cylclosporine
66Ultraviolet light UVB
- Indications
- guttate psoriasis
- gt20 BSA involved
- unresponsive to topical therapies
- Most effective wavelength of light for psoriasis
(280-320 nm) - narrow band UVB (new)
- not found in high enough concentrations in
tanning salons - natural sunlight
67Ultraviolet light UVB
- Risks burns, especially corneal, conjunctivitis
(Face can be shielded) - Very little toxicity involved
- Home light therapy
- Eximer laser
68Ultraviolet light PUVA
- Indications
- severe or incapacitating psoriasis
- previous failure of conventional topical therapy
- previous failure of UVB therapy
- rapid relapse after the above forms of therapy
- Must be administered in dermatologist office
69Ultraviolet light PUVA
- Contraindications
- photosensitive diseases
- photosensitive drugs
- previous or present skin cancers
- previous x-ray therapy to the skin
- cataracts
- pregnancy
70Ultraviolet light PUVA
- Increased risk of squamous cell carcinoma
- Possible increased risk of melanoma
(controversial) - Photoaging
71Methotrexate
- Indications
- psoriatic erythroderma
- acute pustular psoriasis
- localized pustular psoriasis
- psoriatic arthritis
- extensive psoriasis unresponsive to other, less
toxic therapies - psoriasis in areas preventing the individual from
obtaining gainful employment - psoriasis that is psychologically disabling
72Methotrexate
- Contraindications
- pregnancy
- history of significant liver disease
- excessive alcohol intake
- abnormal liver function
- poor renal function
- leukopenia
- active peptic ulcer
- active, severe infectious disease
- unreliable patient
73Methotrexate
- Test dose 2.5-5.0 mg once
- Dosage 10-25 mg 1X/Week
- Baseline labs (cbc w/platelets, urinalysis, BUN,
creatinine, liver functions, CXR) - Ongoing
- liver biopsy (0.5-1.5 grams)
- wbc and PLT q wk x 4 weeks 6 days after last
dose - Hct, liver functions, urinalysis, serum
creatinine every 3 months, at least 6 days after
last dose - Folic Acid 1-5 mg/day for nausea
74Acitretin (Soriatane)
- New retinoid with shorter half-life than
etretinate - 10, 25 mg capsules
- Particularly useful in combination with light
therapy - Many potential side effects
- hepatotoxicity
- elevation of triglycerides
- dry eyes
- hyperostosis
- teratogenic
75Biologics
- Alefacet Amevive
- Efalizumab Raptiva
- Etanercept Enbrel
- Infliximab Remicade
- ximab chimeric monoclonal antibody
- zumab humized monoclonal antibody
- umab human monoclonal antibody
- cept receptor-antibody fusion protein
76Emerging Therapies
77Alternative Therapies
- Fish oil
- Aloe vera
- Oral Vit. D
- Stress reduction
- Lifestyle change
- Antistrep tx
- Thermal bath
- Acupuncture
(Guyette, Clin Fam Pract, 2002)
78Alternative Therapies
79Alternative Therapies
80Case
- Use moisturizer cream sunlight daily
- SCALP
- Medicated shampoo
- BMV foam (Luxiq) BID for 7 days
- Calcipotriene solution qhs
- BODY- Flexural
- TAC 0.1 qd x seven days, followed by
- H/C 2.5 qd prn
- Calcipotriene cream qd
- BODY- rest
- 5 salicylic acid 1x/day thick areas 2 weeks
- Fluocinonide cream 0.05 BID
- See again in 2 weeks
- Tazarotene gel/cream if stubborn plaques
- or steroid dependent
- Anthralin perhaps stubborn areas
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82Psoriasis Patient Education
- National Psoriasis Foundation, 6600 S. W. 92nd
Avenue, Suite 300, Portland, OR 97223,
503-244-7404, Fax. 503-245-0626 - http//www.psoriasis.org/
- Patient ed brochure
- http//www.aafp.org/afp/20000201/20000201d.html
- Comprehensive WEB listing
- http//www.edae.gr/psoriasis.html
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84Bibliography
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effects associated with topical treatments for
psoriasis. Dermatol Online J 2003 9(1) 2. - Lebwohl MG, Tan MH, Meador SL, Singer G. Limited
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0.005 in patients with psoriasis of the face and
intertriginous area. J Am Acad Dermatol 2001
44 77-82. - Koo JY, Lowe NJ, Lew-Kaya DA, et al. Tazarotene
plus UVB phototherapy in the treatment of
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in the treatment of patients with psoriasis.
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