Nail involvement can place a significant burden on patients as a result of functional damage and psychosocial problems, leading to major repercussions on the quality of life. There is strong evidence that nail psoriasis can often be difficult to treat. We report a 69-year-old man with severe onychodystrophy, onycholysis, and pain in the hands; he had been previously treated with topical and systemic traditional therapies without satisfactory response. The patient showed multiple severe psoriatic crumbly nails (nail psoriasis severity index [NAPSI] score of 69) and started ustekinumab treatment at standard dosage of 45 mg fl.s.c. After 24 weeks, both nail matrix and nail bed disease showed marked improvement and the patient continued therapy with ustekinumab (NAPSI 0 at week 104). At week 136 (September 2015), the patient had been complaining of hands pain (visual analogue scale pain: 80) and ultrasonographic (US) evaluations found a synovial proliferation with effusion on metacarpophalangeal joints. The patient continued therapy with ustekinumab, adding methotrexate 10 mg fl.s.c/week. In November 2016, the patient showed a remission of symptoms; clinical and US evaluations did not find signs of synovitis. Methotrexate treatment was suspended and currently the patient reached more than 4 years of ustekinumab treatment without sign and symptoms of synovitis.

Galluzzo, M., D'Adamio, S., Chimenti, M.s., Teoli, M., Bianchi, L., Talamonti, M. (2019). Successful treatment of psoriatic crumbly nails with ustekinumab. DERMATOLOGIC THERAPY, e12914 [10.1111/dth.12914].

Successful treatment of psoriatic crumbly nails with ustekinumab

Galluzzo, Marco;Chimenti, Maria Sole;Bianchi, Luca;Talamonti, Marina
2019-04-09

Abstract

Nail involvement can place a significant burden on patients as a result of functional damage and psychosocial problems, leading to major repercussions on the quality of life. There is strong evidence that nail psoriasis can often be difficult to treat. We report a 69-year-old man with severe onychodystrophy, onycholysis, and pain in the hands; he had been previously treated with topical and systemic traditional therapies without satisfactory response. The patient showed multiple severe psoriatic crumbly nails (nail psoriasis severity index [NAPSI] score of 69) and started ustekinumab treatment at standard dosage of 45 mg fl.s.c. After 24 weeks, both nail matrix and nail bed disease showed marked improvement and the patient continued therapy with ustekinumab (NAPSI 0 at week 104). At week 136 (September 2015), the patient had been complaining of hands pain (visual analogue scale pain: 80) and ultrasonographic (US) evaluations found a synovial proliferation with effusion on metacarpophalangeal joints. The patient continued therapy with ustekinumab, adding methotrexate 10 mg fl.s.c/week. In November 2016, the patient showed a remission of symptoms; clinical and US evaluations did not find signs of synovitis. Methotrexate treatment was suspended and currently the patient reached more than 4 years of ustekinumab treatment without sign and symptoms of synovitis.
9-apr-2019
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MED/35 - MALATTIE CUTANEE E VENEREE
English
NAPSI; nails; psoriasis; psoriatic arthritis; quality of life; ustekinumab
Galluzzo, M., D'Adamio, S., Chimenti, M.s., Teoli, M., Bianchi, L., Talamonti, M. (2019). Successful treatment of psoriatic crumbly nails with ustekinumab. DERMATOLOGIC THERAPY, e12914 [10.1111/dth.12914].
Galluzzo, M; D'Adamio, S; Chimenti, Ms; Teoli, M; Bianchi, L; Talamonti, M
Articolo su rivista
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Galluzzo - Successful treatment of psoriatic crumbly nails with ustekinumab.pdf

solo utenti autorizzati

Licenza: Copyright dell'editore
Dimensione 877.05 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
877.05 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/214399
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 2
  • Scopus 5
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 3
social impact