4.5 Article

Persistence, effectiveness, and real-world outcomes in psoriasis patients treated with secukinumab in Portugal

Journal

DERMATOLOGIC THERAPY
Volume 35, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/dth.15510

Keywords

pharmacology; psoriasis; biologic therapy; drug persistence

Categories

Funding

  1. Novartis
  2. Novartis Pharma

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This study characterized adult patients with moderate to severe psoriasis treated with secukinumab, estimated the drug persistence, and assessed the reasons for treatment discontinuation. The study found that longer time since diagnosis, bio-naive or previous use of only one biologic were predictive factors for secukinumab persistence, while the presence of psoriasis on difficult-to-treat locations predicted drug discontinuation.
To characterize moderate to severe psoriasis (PsO) adult patients treated with secukinumab, estimate drug persistence and assess any reasons for treatment discontinuation. Non-interventional, retrospective, longitudinal record-based study including patients diagnosed with PsO who started secukinumab between January 2018 and January 2020. Baseline characteristics were analyzed by descriptive statistics; drug persistence and predictive factors were assessed through Kaplan-Meier curves and univariate and multivariate analysis, respectively. A total of 302 patients were included in the study: mean age was 48.4 years, 41.7% were female, median time since diagnosis was 12.9 years. 51.3% of patients were bio-naive while 48.7% had previously been treated with biologics. PsO in difficult-to-treat locations (DTL) was present in 82.1% of patients, with scalp PsO in about half of patients. At 5-years follow-up, 84 patients discontinued secukinumab, 45 of which due to loss of efficacy. At week 104, overall treatment persistence was 71.7%. A higher probability of drug persistence was identified among those patients who initiated secukinumab >= 5 years after diagnosis, were bio-naive or treated with only one previous biologic, had no PsO on DTL, and had diabetes mellitus. The predictive factors for discontinuation identified in our study were the start of secukinumab <5 years after diagnosis (p = 0.001), the bio-experimented status with >= 2 biologics (p = 0.007), and the presence of PsO on DTL (p = 0.014). A time since diagnosis of >= 5 years, naive status or previous use of only one biologic are predictors for secukinumab persistence, whereas the presence of PsO on DTL predicts drug discontinuation.

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