The objective of this study is to determine drug effectiveness and safety of the tumor necrosis factor-alpha blocker monoclonal antibody adalimumab in a real-life cohort of 54 children and/or adolescents with severe plaque psoriasis. Retrospective, multicenter analysis over a 52-week period is discussed in this study. Efficacy was determined by the percentage of patients achieving Psoriasis Area Severity Index (PASI 75) and PASI 90 at weeks 16, 24, and 52 and the response in biologic-naive versus non-naive patients. Safety was assessed by the number of patients experiencing at least one adverse event. At week 16, 29.6% of patients achieved a 90% PASI score reduction (PASI 90), while 55.5% of patients achieved a 75% PASI score reduction (PASI 75). Effectiveness was sustained through week 24, since PASI 90 response increased to 55.5% and PASI 75 response increased to 74.0% of patients. The PASI response rates did not differ between biologic-naive and non-naive patients. The drug was well tolerated and no serious infections were observed. Adalimumab was effective and safe in this cohort of children with severe plaque psoriasis in a 52-week observation. Effectiveness did not differ between biologic-naive and non-naive patients.

Lernia, V.d., Bianchi, L., Guerriero, C., Stingeni, L., Gisondi, P., Filoni, A., et al. (2019). Adalimumab in severe plaque psoriasis of childhood: A multi-center, retrospective real-life study up to 52 weeks observation. DERMATOLOGIC THERAPY, e13091 [10.1111/dth.13091].

Adalimumab in severe plaque psoriasis of childhood: A multi-center, retrospective real-life study up to 52 weeks observation

Bianchi, Luca;Zangrilli, Arianna;
2019-10-03

Abstract

The objective of this study is to determine drug effectiveness and safety of the tumor necrosis factor-alpha blocker monoclonal antibody adalimumab in a real-life cohort of 54 children and/or adolescents with severe plaque psoriasis. Retrospective, multicenter analysis over a 52-week period is discussed in this study. Efficacy was determined by the percentage of patients achieving Psoriasis Area Severity Index (PASI 75) and PASI 90 at weeks 16, 24, and 52 and the response in biologic-naive versus non-naive patients. Safety was assessed by the number of patients experiencing at least one adverse event. At week 16, 29.6% of patients achieved a 90% PASI score reduction (PASI 90), while 55.5% of patients achieved a 75% PASI score reduction (PASI 75). Effectiveness was sustained through week 24, since PASI 90 response increased to 55.5% and PASI 75 response increased to 74.0% of patients. The PASI response rates did not differ between biologic-naive and non-naive patients. The drug was well tolerated and no serious infections were observed. Adalimumab was effective and safe in this cohort of children with severe plaque psoriasis in a 52-week observation. Effectiveness did not differ between biologic-naive and non-naive patients.
3-ott-2019
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MED/35 - MALATTIE CUTANEE E VENEREE
English
adolescence; childhood; psoriasis; therapy; treatment
Lernia, V.d., Bianchi, L., Guerriero, C., Stingeni, L., Gisondi, P., Filoni, A., et al. (2019). Adalimumab in severe plaque psoriasis of childhood: A multi-center, retrospective real-life study up to 52 weeks observation. DERMATOLOGIC THERAPY, e13091 [10.1111/dth.13091].
Lernia, Vd; Bianchi, L; Guerriero, C; Stingeni, L; Gisondi, P; Filoni, A; Guarneri, C; Belloni Fortina, A; Lasagni, C; Simonetti, O; Neri, I; Zangrilli, A; Moretta, G; Hansel, K; Casanova, Dm; Girolomoni, G; Cannavò, Sp; Bonamonte, D
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/221589
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