Topical, oral treatments
As for topical approaches to treating psoriasis, adding halobetasol propionate 0.01% to tazarotene 0.045% may have a synergistic effect, while tapinarof 1% cream holds promise, he said. Tapinarof, which is expected to be approved this year, is an investigative aryl hydrocarbon agonist that inhibits an array of proinflammatory cytokines, including interferon-gamma and TNF-alpha. “It has been shown to have inhibitory effects both on Th17 cytokines and Th2 cytokines,” Dr. Han said. “What’s nice about this is that patients still appear to have treatment effect 1-2 months after stopping the drug.”
Another topical agent now under FDA review for psoriasis, is roflumilast, a phosphodiesterase type 4 (PDE4) inhibitor, which has been shown to have a treatment efficacy of 30% or more. “We’ll see how this works into our treatment regimen for psoriasis,” he said, as strategies targeting PDE4 have already been reported to help treat psoriasis.
With regards to oral therapies, he said that there are concerns about the efficacy of the oral PDE4 inhibitor apremilast, approved for psoriasis, compared with other biologics. Deucravacitinib, an oral selective tyrosine kinase 2 (TYK2) inhibitor also under FDA review for psoriasis, “may fill this gap, because its efficacy seems much stronger and really capitalizes on blocking IL-23, which we know is a central pathway in the pathogenesis of psoriasis.”
Phototherapy is another treatment option. Home narrowband-UVB devices cost $3,000-$5,000, “which is a fraction of 1 year of biologic treatment,” Dr. Han said. Older data on phototherapy suggest that “lesions can clear within 2-3 months, depending on how often you do the phototherapy, while newer data suggest that 75% of patients can achieve clear or minimal disease” with phototherapy.
Biologic therapy
If patients meet criteria for treatment with a biologic, he begins the conversation by saying, “I don’t want to give you an immunosuppressant, but your psoriasis represents an overactivation of inflammation in your body, so in some way we have to bring that down. Ideally, we would target your immune system in a way that targets psoriasis very narrowly, while leaving it to do what it needs to: protecting against infections and neoplasia.”
XXXIL-17 inhibitors generally have the fastest onset of action, Dr. Han noted. Authors of a review paper found that achievement of Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) 50 was 1.8 weeks with brodalumab, 1.9 weeks for ixekizumab, 3 weeks for high-dose secukinumab, 3.5 weeks for adalimumab, 3.7 weeks for infliximab, 5.1 weeks for low-dose ustekinumab, 6.5 weeks for high-dose etanercept, and 10.9 weeks with low-dose etanercept, while achievement of PASI 50 was closer to 1 month for IL-23 inhibitors.
“The conversation I have with patients on IL-23 inhibitors is, ‘we’re in this for the long haul,’ otherwise they come in 2 months later,” he said. “They may have gotten clearer but we’re talking about getting well over half of our patients to PASI 100, or to clear or minimal disease, and they may not have gotten there yet. It helps to frame expectations.”
Dr. Han disclosed that he is a consultant to, a speaker for, or has received research support from Beiersdorf, CeraVe, Celgene, Janssen, Lilly, MC2, Pfizer, UCB, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bond Avillion, Athenex, Amgen, AbbVie, Regeneron/Sanofi, LEO Pharma, Ortho Dermatologics, BMS, Sun Pharma, Dermavant, Dermtech, MedX, Novartis, and Castle Biosciences.