Effects of Apremilast on Pruritus and Skin Discomfort/Pain Correlate With Improvements in Quality of Life in Patients With Moderate to Severe Plaque Psoriasis

Authors

  • Jeffrey M. Sobell
  • Peter Foley
  • Darryl Toth
  • Ulrich Mrowietz
  • Giampiero Girolomoni
  • Joana Goncalves
  • Robert M. Day
  • Rongdean Chen
  • Gil Yosipovitch

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-2360

Abstract

Pruritus and skin discomfort/pain negatively impact health-related quality of life (HRQoL). The effects of apremilast, an oral phosphodiesterase inhibitor, on pruritus, skin discomfort/pain, and patient global assessment of psoriasis disease activity (PgAPDA) were assessed in moderate/severe chronic plaque psoriasis patients in the phase 3 ESTEEM trials. Significant improvements in pruritus and skin discomfort/pain observed at Week 2 with apremilast versus placebo (both studies, p < 0.0001) were sustained through Week 32. Among apremilast-treated patients, improvements in pruritus visual analog scale (VAS) scores correlated with Dermatology Life Quality Index scores (rs = 0.55 [Week 16], rs≥0.51 [Week 32]; both studies, p < 0.001). PgAPDA correlated with improvements in pruritus (rs≥0.56 [Week 16]; rs≥0.53 [Week 32]; both studies, p < 0.001) and skin discomfort/pain (rs ≥0.54 [Week 16]; rs≥0.53 [Week 32]; both studies, p < 0.001) VAS scores. Apremilast provided rapid and sustained improvement in pruritus and skin discomfort/pain, symptoms not typically captured in psoriasis assessments (e.g., PASI) that contribute significantly to patients' disease severity and HRQoL perceptions.

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Published

2016-02-17

How to Cite

Sobell, J. M., Foley, P., Toth, D., Mrowietz, U., Girolomoni, G., Goncalves, J., Day, R. M., Chen, R., & Yosipovitch, G. (2016). Effects of Apremilast on Pruritus and Skin Discomfort/Pain Correlate With Improvements in Quality of Life in Patients With Moderate to Severe Plaque Psoriasis. Acta Dermato-Venereologica, 96(4), 514–520. https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-2360

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Articles