Multimedia

Psoriasis Therapy During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Should Patients Continue Biologics?

Author and Disclosure Information

Psoriasis patients are reaching out to their dermatologists with concerns about taking biologics and the risk for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Dr. Lawrence Green provides his recommendation, which is for patients to continue their biologics. "If you stop your biologic, and it will take a few months for your psoriasis to come back, but when that happens, if you go back to where you were you're at much more risk for COVID-19 infection than you are right now taking your biologic and controlling your disease," he reports. If patients have had exposure to COVID-19 or develop symptoms, they should stop biologics immediately. Patients taking biologics should exercise extra precautions, as recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, to prevent infection.


 

Vidyard Video

Recommended Reading

COVID-19 prompts ‘lifesaving’ policy change for opioid addiction
MDedge Infectious Disease
DIY masks: Worth the risk? Researchers are conflicted
MDedge Infectious Disease
New ASAM guideline released amid COVID-19 concerns
MDedge Infectious Disease
Emergency Rule: Docs can bill for telehealth and COVID-19 tests. Here’s how
MDedge Infectious Disease
Preventable diseases could gain a foothold because of COVID-19
MDedge Infectious Disease
Flu now riding on COVID-19’s coattails
MDedge Infectious Disease
Should patients with COVID-19 avoid ibuprofen or RAAS antagonists?
MDedge Infectious Disease
SECURE-IBD registry traces COVID-19 in patients with Crohn’s, colitis
MDedge Infectious Disease
Webinar confronts unique issues for the bleeding disorders community facing COVID-19
MDedge Infectious Disease
Amid hydroxychloroquine hopes, lupus patients face shortages
MDedge Infectious Disease