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Five pearls guide pediatric psoriasis systemic therapy


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE PDA ANNUAL MEETING

When you need speed, try cyclosporine. Cyclosporine acts rapidly. An initial high dose of 5 mg/kg per day can take control of refractory plaque psoriasis, rapidly moving pustular psoriasis, or severe, rapidly progressive psoriasis. No more than a year of continuous use is the guideline, so you don’t want to start low and go slow. "Kids and typically tolerate and need higher doses" compared with adults, Dr. Cordoro said. Use the modified form (Neoral) for better oral bioavailability and better sustained drug levels, she suggested.

This, too, is a rescue treatment intended to control and stabilize the disease, followed by tapering and transitioning to other therapies. The most serious potential side effects include nephrotoxicity, hypertension, and immunosuppression. The most common side effects include nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, anorexia, and headache. Less often, cyclosporine can cause myalgia, arthralgia, paresthesia, gingival hyperplasia, or hypertrichosis. "My colleagues in oncology assure me that at the doses we’re using for psoriasis, we’re not at risk for giving these kids carcinomas down the road," she said.

Biologics play an important role. Biologics are potent, but wouldn’t be the first choice for systemic therapy because they don’t have prolonged efficacy, said Dr. Cordoro. Their precise place in the therapeutic armamentarium is yet to be defined. "I like to reserve a biologic for when I don’t necessarily have a better choice, because I know I have a finite period of time for biologics," she said.

Nonetheless, anti–tumor necrosis factor agents can play a role in treating refractory plaque psoriasis, severe or refractory generalized pustular psoriasis, or psoriatic arthritis, Dr. Cordoro said. Anecdotal reports suggest that IL-12 and IL-23 inhibitors may help with pediatric psoriasis, but there are no study data yet.

The potential advantages of using biologics include less frequent dosing, less laboratory monitoring, and targeted treatment. On the other hand, biologics are expensive, require injection or infusion, have as-yet-unknown long-term risks, and are not approved for treating pediatric psoriasis (so insurance coverage is a battle), said Dr. Cordoro. Questions remain about standardized dosing and monitoring protocols, and about the endpoints of biologic therapy in this setting, although experience with biologics and evidence of their efficacy and safety in children are accumulating, she said.

Dr. Cordoro recommended two articles that she coauthored that provide expert consensus guidelines, tables, and charts for systemic treatment and monitoring of children with psoriasis (Dermatol. Clin. 2013;31:267-88 and Skin Therapy Lett. 2013;18:1-4).

Dr. Cordoro reported having no financial disclosures.

sboschert@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @sherryboschert

*CORRECTION, 11/4/2013: An earlier version of this article imprecisely stated the results of the informal study.

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