Transcript Slide 1
* For Best Viewing: Open in Slide Show Mode Click on icon or From the View menu, select the Slide Show option * To help you as you prepare a talk, we have included the relevant text from ITC in the notes pages of each slide © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. in the clinic Psoriasis © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What are the most common symptoms? Erythematous lesions with loose, silvery-white scales Removing scale can induce punctate bleeding: Auspitz sign Papules can coalesce in pruritic patches / plaques Nails and joints may be affected A. Extensive, well-demarcated erythematous plaques of abdomen © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. B. Erythematous plaque of elbow C. Erythematous, scaling plaques of abdomen © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What is the differential diagnosis? Plaque Eczema; dermatophyte infection; superficial squamous / basal cell CA; subacute cutaneous lupus Guttate Secondary syphilis; pityriasis rosea Erythrodermic Pityriasis rubra pilaris; drug eruptions Pustular Candidiasis; acute generalized exanthematic pustulosis Inverse Intertrigo; cutaneous T-cell lymphoma © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. Which areas of the skin are most commonly affected? In chronic plaque psoriasis Extensor surfaces (elbows and knees) Lumbosacral area Intergluteal cleft Scalp In inverse psoriasis Intertriginous areas © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. How often are the nails involved? Up to 55% with psoriasis have nail involvement Occurs in any subtype <5% of nail disease occurs in those lacking other cutaneous findings of psoriasis ≤90% with psoriatic arthritis have nail involvement Fingernail involvement in 50% of cases Toenail involvement in 30% of cases Requires aggressive treatment: intralesional steroid injections © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. How often are joints affected by psoriasis? Which ones? Psoriatic arthritis occurs in up to 30% Inflammatory, seronegative spondyloarthropathy Stiffness, pain, swelling of joints, ligaments, tendons Hands more likely involved than feet Polyarticular peripheral joint involvement common About 5% have only axial involvement Up to 50% have both spine & peripheral joint involvement © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. Enthesitis: inflammation where tendon, ligament, or joint capsule fibers insert into bone Dactylitis: enthesitis of tendons and ligaments + synovitis of an entire digit © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. When should joints be tapped to diagnose PsA? Arthrocentesis is not recommended Use clinical observations Symmetrical joint stiffness (hands, feet, large joints) for ≥30 minutes in morning or after long periods of inactivity Use radiologic observations Joint erosions, joint-space narrowing Bony proliferation, spur formation Osteolysis with “pencil-in-cup” deformities © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. Aside from skin and joints, what else should be examined when considering a diagnosis of psoriasis? Psoriasis: systemic inflammatory disorder Inflammation cascade promotes endothelial dysfunction and oxidative stress Increases risk for: Atherosclerosis-based CV disease Hypertension Obesity and the metabolic syndrome Diabetes Smoking © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What triggers or unmasks psoriasis? Bacterial and viral infections URI associated with guttate psoriasis Especially Streptococcus pyogenes Stress Often first outbreak traced to stressful event Lesions can be induced locally in areas of physical trauma, i.e., vaccination, tattoos, sunburn, excoriation Certain medications Lithium, interferon, antimalarials, β-blockers, ACE inhibitors, NSAIDs, withdrawal of oral corticosteroids Cold weather with low humidity © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. Are there any specific diagnostic tests for psoriasis? No Diagnosis is clinical For initial work-up: Total body skin evaluation, including nails and scalp ? Joint symptoms (stiffness, swelling, pain, decreased ROM) ? Personal or family history of autoimmune diseases © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. Which blood tests are abnormal in psoriasis, and how specific are they to the diagnosis? Rarely needed for diagnosis Rapid plasma reagin: to distinguish from syphilis Antinuclear antibody, anti-Ro, and anti-La: confirms Dx if subacute cutaneous lupus suspected CRP levels: occasionally elevated in PsA Uric acid levels: may be elevated, especially in erythrodermic psoriasis © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What is the role of skin biopsy in making the diagnosis? Histologic confirmation Classic findings of psoriasis Epidermal hyperplasia Parakeratosis Thinning of granular layer Neutrophil + lymphocyte infiltration in epidermis and dermis Increased prominence of dermal papillary vasculature © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Diagnosis and Evaluation… Diagnosis most often made clinically Psoriasis papules, patches, or plaques: sharply demarcated, erythematous, scaly, pruritic Concomitant joint and nail involvement Histologic and lab abnormalities not required Triggers: infection, trauma, stress, and certain drugs Psoriasis increases risk for CV disease and events If diagnosis uncertain, consult dermatologist © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What drug therapies are used in treatment? Topical therapies Systemic therapies Corticosteroids Methotrexate Vitamin D analogues Cyclosporine A Topical retinoids Oral vitamin A derivatives Calcineurin inhibitors Salicylic acid Biological therapies Anthralin Adalimumab Coal tar Alefacept Phototherapy Etanercept Golimumab Infliximab Ustekinumab © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. How should a clinician choose between topical and systemic drug therapy? Determine disease severity Measure affected body surface area ≤3%: mild 3%-10%: moderate ≥10% or serious adverse affect on QOL: severe Determine the location of lesions Consider affect on QOL Mild disease: topical therapies Moderate-to-severe disease: systemic and topical therapies; biologics if systemics fail / can’t be used © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What is the role of phototherapy? For widespread disease or when disease substantially affects QOL Efficacious and cost-effective Not immunosuppressive like systemic drugs Affects Langerhans cells directly, cytokines indirectly Don’t use with photosensitive disorders © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. Is there a role for combination drug therapy and phototherapy? Improves efficacy and decreases toxicity of a potentially hazardous combination agent Phototherapy can be combined with: Anthralin or coal tar MTX Retinoids Biological therapies © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What alternative therapies are shown to improve quality of life and outcomes? Salicylic acid Combine with other topical therapies Dead Sea Unique UVA-UVB ratio + high water salinity improves psoriasis May increase risk for nonmelanoma skin cancer © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. How should psoriasis be treated in pregnant patients? Consider therapy benefits vs. potential fetal risk First-line treatment: topical agent or phototherapy Alternative to phototherapy: TNF-α blocker (Category B) Severe psoriasis: cyclosporine A (Category C) Contraindicated: retinoids, MTX, oral vitamin A derivatives © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. When is it necessary to hospitalize patients with psoriasis? Erythrodermic psoriasis Inflammation of ≥75% BSA +/- presence of exfoliation Triggers: steroid withdrawal, sun exposure, drug reactions, emotional stress First-line: adjuvant topical treatment + CSA or infliximab Hospitalize for hypothermia or hyperthermia, protein loss, dehydration, infection, renal failure, hi-output cardiac failure Acute episodes of generalized pustular psoriasis Pinhead-sized pustules on erythematous background Pustules may dry out, exfoliate, and redevelop Triggers: corticosteroid withdrawal for plaque psoriasis Retinoids uniquely effective treatment Hospitalize for systemic symptoms © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. When should patients be referred to a dermatologist? Recalcitrant disease Moderate-to-severe disease Disease that significantly impairs quality of life Dermatologist can initiate Phototherapy Systemic therapy Combination therapy © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. When should patients be referred to a rheumatologist? When PsA is diagnosed Majority have psoriasis years before joint symptoms develop Rheumatologist guides treatment to Alleviate pain and swelling Inhibit structural damage Improve quality of life © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. When should patients be referred to a psychiatrist? Order a consultation if psychiatric disorder suspected Screen for psychosocial aspects Psychosocial morbidity + decreased occupational function Clinical severity may not reflect extent of emotional impact © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What is the role of the PCP in treating psoriasis? Identify conditions associated with psoriasis Help prevent comorbid conditions Provide counsel regarding lifestyle modifications Consult specialists (dermatology, rheumatology) © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. How often should patients be followed by a dermatologist? Regularly to assess: Disease severity Compliance and medication toxicity Quality-of-life issues Topical steroids: every 6-12 months More frequently if using more potent topical steroids Systemics: Follow more frequently MTX/CsA: Examine for response and skin cancer Phototherapy: annually Check for photoaging, pigmentation, skin cancer © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. Should patients be routinely followed by other specialists? Mild PsA: PCP Treat with NSAIDs or intra-articular steroid injections Moderate-to-severe PsA: rheumatologist / dermatologist Risk for structural damage More aggressive therapy required © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Treatment and management… Mild-to-moderate psoriasis Topical therapy: steroid, vitamin D analogue, retinoid, calcineurin inhibitor Moderate-to-severe psoriasis Traditional systemic medications, biological agents, or phototherapy + topical therapy For PsA, start treatment early to avoid structural damage Mild disease: NSAIDs More severe systemic disease: biological agent, MTX, or a combination of the two © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. How should patients be educated about psoriasis pathophysiology and genetics? Normal skin cells: mature + fall off body in 28 days Psoriasis skin cells: mature in just 3 to 4 days + pile up into lesions instead of shedding Requires both inheritance + environmental trigger ≥10% of general population inherits ≥1 predisposing gene But only 3% of population develops psoriasis If both parents have psoriasis, offspring incidence up to 50% If 1 parent affected, offspring incidence 16% If only a sibling affected, incidence 8% © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What should patients be told about preventing exacerbations? Avoid common triggers Adhere to prescribed treatments Use occlusive agents, emollients, and humectants Provide and retain moisture in the skin Enhance efficacy of topical corticosteroids and exert a steroid-sparing effect Prevent disease exacerbation Inhibit the Koebner response © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What should patients be told about the risks of topical or systemic steroids? Don’t use systemic steroids for psoriasis Topical steroid side effects Atrophy, telangiectasia, striae, acne May exacerbate pre- / co-existing dermatoses Can cause contact dermatitis May lead to rebound Limit superpotent topicals (≤2x/d for ≤4wks, ≤50 g/wk) Replace or combine with vitamin D analogues, retinoids, and calcineurin inhibitors Increases efficacy with less steroid exposure © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What behavior modifications can ameliorate the effects of psoriasis? Stopping tobacco use Reducing alcohol use Maintaining ideal body weight © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Patient Education… Essential to optimizing treatment Genetic + environmental factors contribute to psoriasis Smoking, alcohol, obesity = more severe symptoms Counsel patients on lifestyle modification Individualized treatment regimen promotes adherence, improves treatment outcomes, and avoids toxicity © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1.