Over the last decade, the treatment landscape for moderate to severe psoriasis has undergone transformative changes with the advent of biotechnological drugs. Monoclonal antibodies targeting the IL-17 and IL-23 pathways have displayed remarkable clinical efficacy and safety, even among patients with complex comorbidities. These innovations have extended across various age groups within the psoriatic population. However, a scarcity of age-specific data remains regarding the efficacy and safety of these medications. Our study tries to bridge this gap by systematically presenting data obtained from the analysis of 1055 patients treated for psoriasis with anti-IL17 and anti-IL23 drugs during a 1-year period. The effectiveness and safety of anti-IL-17 and anti-IL23 drugs for moderate to severe psoriasis were assessed across four different age groups ranging from patients less than 26 years old to patients older than 65 years, divided in four year ranges. In the studied population, baseline PASI score was significantly higher in the age group of individuals over 65 years compared to those under 26 years old. Patients over 65 years also exhibited a slower rate of improvement in PASI-90 and PASI < 3 at the 16-week mark compared to other age groups. However, no clinically significant differences in treatment response were found when comparing overall responses among different age groups. In age groups older than 26 years, anti-IL17 drugs seems faster in the achievement of PASI-100 when compared to anti-IL23 drugs. This trend became more pronounced with increasing age. The investigation provides insights into treatment responses and patient characteristics, highlighting the influence of age as a significant variable in patient management.

Aging Impact in Response to Different Classes of Biological Treatment in Psoriatic Patients: A Real-Life Observational Study

Rosset, Francois
First
;
Mastorino, Luca;Ortoncelli, Michela;Quaglino, Pietro;Ribero, Simone
2023-01-01

Abstract

Over the last decade, the treatment landscape for moderate to severe psoriasis has undergone transformative changes with the advent of biotechnological drugs. Monoclonal antibodies targeting the IL-17 and IL-23 pathways have displayed remarkable clinical efficacy and safety, even among patients with complex comorbidities. These innovations have extended across various age groups within the psoriatic population. However, a scarcity of age-specific data remains regarding the efficacy and safety of these medications. Our study tries to bridge this gap by systematically presenting data obtained from the analysis of 1055 patients treated for psoriasis with anti-IL17 and anti-IL23 drugs during a 1-year period. The effectiveness and safety of anti-IL-17 and anti-IL23 drugs for moderate to severe psoriasis were assessed across four different age groups ranging from patients less than 26 years old to patients older than 65 years, divided in four year ranges. In the studied population, baseline PASI score was significantly higher in the age group of individuals over 65 years compared to those under 26 years old. Patients over 65 years also exhibited a slower rate of improvement in PASI-90 and PASI < 3 at the 16-week mark compared to other age groups. However, no clinically significant differences in treatment response were found when comparing overall responses among different age groups. In age groups older than 26 years, anti-IL17 drugs seems faster in the achievement of PASI-100 when compared to anti-IL23 drugs. This trend became more pronounced with increasing age. The investigation provides insights into treatment responses and patient characteristics, highlighting the influence of age as a significant variable in patient management.
2023
12
23
1
3
age and biological treatment; anti IL-17; anti-IL-23; psoriasis; psoriasis and age; psoriasis comorbidities; quality of life
Rosset, Francois; Mastorino, Luca; Dapavo, Paolo; Ortoncelli, Michela; Quaglino, Pietro; Ribero, Simone
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1951723
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