| Literature DB >> 30145740 |
Kristen M Beck1, Eric J Yang2, Isabelle M Sanchez2, Wilson Liao2.
Abstract
Genital psoriasis affects approximately 63% of psoriasis patients at least once in their lifetime. More than any other area on the body, genital lesions significantly impair patients' psychologic well-being and quality of life. We aimed to systematically review the published evidence on the safety, efficacy, and tolerability of treatments of genital psoriasis and synthesize the available clinical data. A total of 1 randomized controlled trial, 11 open-label studies, and 26 case reports were included in our analysis, representing a total of 458 patients, of which 332 were adults and 126 were children. Topical corticosteroids were commonly used first-line for genital psoriasis and were well tolerated. Nonsteroidal agents, such as topical calcineurin inhibitors or vitamin D analogs, were also efficacious, but were often irritating. One systemic agent, ixekizumab, demonstrated efficacy in reducing genital psoriasis symptoms in a large, randomized, placebo-controlled trial. Various systemic and topical medications may improve genital psoriasis lesions, but there is a lack of high-quality evidence to guide clinical decision-making. Specific reporting of efficacy for genital psoriasis in larger controlled studies of psoriasis treatments are necessary to improve the available evidence regarding the optimal treatment regimen for genital psoriasis.Entities:
Keywords: Genital psoriasis; Psoriasis; Therapy; Treatment
Year: 2018 PMID: 30145740 PMCID: PMC6261118 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-018-0257-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Fig. 1Genital psoriasis: study selection for treatment
Studies on treatments for genital psoriasis in adults
| Sources | Study characteristics | Treatments and outcomes | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study design, level of evidence | Type of psoriasis | Site | Age (years) | Cohort (M/F) | Successful (side effects) | Unsuccessful (side effects) | Notes | |
| J Fam Pract 2016 [ | Case report, 5 | Plaque psoriasis | Groin | 45 | 1 M | Triamcinolone cream, clobetasol ointment | 1% hydrocortisone cream, topical antifungals, oral antifungals | 90% improvement after 1 month, 95% improvement after 2 months |
| Albert et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Plaque psoriasis | Anogenital area, genitocrural folds | 71 | 1 F | Oral doxepin, methotrexate 7.5–10 mg/week (GI disturbance) | Mild to ultra-potent topical corticosteroids, topical tacalcitol, topical doxepin, twice weekly PUVA for 2 months, topical 0.1% tacrolimus (extreme irritation, worsening of pruritus) | Oral doxepin partially helpful in alleviating itching, methotrexate improved genitocrural folds but abandoned because of GI disturbance |
| Albert et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Plaque psoriasis | Groin, genitalia extending to perianal and natal cleft | 77 | 1 F | – | Clomitrazole 1%, hydrocortisone 1% | Minimal improvement |
| Bissonnette et al. [ | Open-label case series, 4 | Plaque psoriasis | Penis, scrotum | 42 (29–70) | 12 M | Topical 0.1% tacrolimus twice daily (mild pruritus or burning sensation of limited duration) | – | Mean genital PASI decreased from 15.8 to 1.2 after 8 weeks |
| Cassano et al. [ | Open-label case series, 4 | Plaque psoriasis | Genitalia | 18+ | 9c | Efalizumab 1 mg/kg weekly | – | Considerable improvement in genital lesions after 12 weeks |
| Fischer et al. [ | Open-label case series, 4 | Plaque psoriasis | Vulva | 33 (15–56) | 8 F | TCS, 2% LPC, topical calcipotriol | – | Resolution of vulvitis |
| Foureur et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Napkin psoriasis | Diaper area | 77 | 1 F | Betamethasone 0.05% cream | Bifonazole cream daily | Cured in 1 month |
| Foureur et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Napkin psoriasis | Diaper area | 87 | 1 M | Bifonazole cream daily | – | Improved in 1 month |
| Foureur et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Napkin psoriasis | Diaper area | 100 | 1 F | Betamethasone 0.05% cream | – | Cured in 1 month |
| Foureur et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Napkin psoriasis | Diaper area | 87 | 1 F | Bifonazole cream daily, oral fluconazole 100 mg daily | – | Improved with fluconazole after 1 month |
| Guglielmetti et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Plaque psoriasis | Vulva, groin, perianal region | 42 | 1 F | Dapsone 100 g daily, mycophenolate mofetil 500 mg twice daily | 20 mg methotrexate weekly (UTI) | Complete clearance after 4 weeks of dapsone, remission for 2 years using topical tacrolimus 0.1% and calcipotriol. Slow improvement with mycophenolate mofetil after 2 months, partial therapeutic response with methotrexate, stopped at 4 months |
| Jemec et al. [ | Open-label case series, 4 | Plaque psoriasis | Glans penis, inner fold of prepuce | 43 | 3 M | Topical cyclosporine solution 100 mg/ml three times daily | – | Mean baseline scorea decreased from 4.8 to 0.8 after 8 weeks, cyclosporine well tolerated |
| Ješe et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Plaque psoriasis | Glans, foreskin, gluteal fold | 37 | 1 M | Adalimumab 40 mg every 2 weeks | Topical pimecrolimus, topical corticosteroids, methotrexate 15 mg weekly (nausea, vomiting, headache, insomnia) | Near complete regression at 90 days, complete clearance at 6 months |
| Kapila et al. [ | Open-label case series, 4 | Plaque psoriasis | Vulva | 30 (2–84) | 145 F | Methylprednisolone aceponate 0.1% (110), 2% LPC (118), hydrocortisone 1% (94), calcipotriol 0.05% (10), betamethasone dipropionate 0.05% (7), betamethasone dipropionate 0.05% + calcioptriol 0.05% (4), UVB phototherapy (3), clioquinol 1% (1), clobetasol propionate 0.05% (1), methotrexate (1) | Methylprednisolone aceponate 0.1% (7), 2% LPC (5), hydrocortisone 1% (6) | 93.8%responded to topical treatment |
| Martin-Ezquerra et al. [ | Open-label case series, 4 | Plaque psoriasis | Intertriginous folds | 18+ | 8 M/7 F | 0.1% tacrolimus ointment twice daily | – | Improvement as early as day 15, mean total scoreb from 6.88 to 0.37 after 60 days |
| Meeuwis et al. [ | Open-label case series, 4 | Plaque psoriasis | Genitalia | 50 (20–80) | 25 M/17 F | Low-potency corticosteroid cream with (18) and without (16) vitamin D analog ointment, moderate-potency corticosteroid cream (5), daily tacrolimus with low-potency corticosteroid cream (2), alternating mild and higher potency corticosteroid cream (1) | – | Significant improvement in PASI, IA, SUM, DLQI, FSDS, sQoL-M |
| Quan et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Pustular psoriasis | Glans penis, penile shaft | 23 | 1 M | Oral itraconazole 200 mg bid, triamcinolone, desonide, mometasone furoate, baking soda preparation | Hydrocortisone 1%, coal tar 2%, naftifine hydrochloride | Some improvement with itraconazole, minimal improvement with hydrocortisone and coal tar |
| Rallis et al. [ | Open-label case series, 4 | Plaque psoriasis | Glans penis, scrotum | 37 (22–72) | 7 M | 0.1% tacrolimus ointment twice daily for 10 days, then every 7 days thereafter | – | Complete clearance after 3 weeks, 43% still clear at 12 weeks |
| Ryan et al. [ | Randomized, placebo-controlled phase III clinical trial, 1 | Plaque psoriasis | Genitalia | 43 (19–77) | 56 M/19 F | Ixekizumab 160 mg at week 0, then 80 mg every 2 weeks thereafter | – | Significant improvement in genital psoriasis symptoms compared with placebo as measured by sPGA-G 0/1 (74% vs. 8%), GenPS-SFQ item 2 score 0/1 (78% vs. 21%), and ≥ 3 point reduction in genital itch NRS (60% vs. 8%) |
| Sezer et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Plaque psoriasis | Glans penis, penile shaft | 26 | 1 M | Betamethasone valerate, topical 5% salicylic acid | – | Marked regression of the lesions |
| Shimamoto et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Pustular psoriasis | Groin | 80 | 1 M | Oral chlorpromazine 125 mg/day | Corticosteroids, antibiotics, griseofulvin | Resolution of skin symptoms several weeks after initiation of treatment, associated with reduction in manic symptoms |
| Singh et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Pustular psoriasis | Glans penis | 37 | 1 M | Dapsone 100 mg daily, doxycycline, metronidazole, penicillin, topical steroid ointments | – | Complete clearance in 4 weeks with dapsone, maintenance with dapsone 50 mg daily |
| Winrauch et al. | Case report, 5 | Plaque psoriasis | Labium majus | 22 | 1 F | Betametasone 17-valerate three times daily | – | Clearance of lesions |
| Yao et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Plaque psoriasis | Glans penis | 37 | 1 M | Tacrolimus 0.1% ointment twice daily | Topical ketoconazole cream for 2 weeks | Resolution of lesions after 3 weeks |
| Zampetti et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Plaque psoriasis | Glans penis | 45 | 1 M | Topical tacrolimus 0.1% ointment daily | – | Complete resolution after 3 weeks |
PASI Psoriasis Area and Severity Index, IA investigator’s assessment of affected genital skin, SUM sum of severity score for erythema, desquamation, and induration, DLQI Dermatological Life Quality Index, FSDS Female Sexual Distress Scale, SQoL-M Sexual Quality of Life questionnaire for use in men, sPGA-G static Physician’s Global Assessment of Genitalia, GenPS-SFQ Genital Psoriasis Sexual Frequency Questionnaire, NRS numeric rating scale
aMeasured on a 6-point scale grading redness, scaling, and maceration
bMeasured on a 9-point scale grading erythema, infiltration, and desquamation of face, genitalia, and intertriginous areas
cUnspecified sex
Evidence on topical treatments for genital psoriasis by medication
| Medication | Successful | Unsuccessful |
|---|---|---|
| Zinc paste | Fergusson et al. [ | Andersen et al. [ |
| Salicylic acid | Andersen et al. [ | |
| Aniline dye | Andersen et al. [ | |
| Topical antibiotics | Cretu et al. [ | |
| Topical antifungals | Watanabe et al. [ | Baggio et al. [ |
| Topical corticosteroids | ||
| Low potency | Cretu et al. [ | Andersen et al. [ |
| Mid potency | Afsar et al. [ | Amichai et al. [ |
| High potency | Hernandez et al. [ | Albert et al. [ |
| Topical calcineurin inhibitors | Amichai et al. [ | Albert et al. [ |
| Vitamin D analogs | Amichai et al. [ | |
| Coal tar | Andersen et al. [ | Quan et al. [ |
| Topical doxepin | Albert et al. [ | |
| Combination therapies | ||
| Topical antifungal and tar | Kapila et al. [ | |
| Low-potency TCS + topical antifungals | Andersen et al. [ | Albert et al. [ |
| Low-potency TCS + TCIs | Kapila et al. [ | |
| Low-potency TCS + tar | Kapila et al. [ | Kapila et al. [ |
| Low-potency TCS + topical vitamin D analog | Meeuwis et al. [ | |
| Low-potency TCS + tar + vitamin D analog | Fischer et al. [ | |
| Low-potency TCS + mid-potency TCS + tar | Kapila et al. [ | Kapila et al. [ |
| Low-potency TCS + mid-potency TCS + tar + vitamin D analog | Kapila et al. [ | |
| Mid-potency TCS + tar | Kapila et al. [ | Kapila et al. [ |
| Mid-potency TCS + tar + vitamin D analog | Kapila et al. [ | |
| High-potency TCS + vitamin D + tar | Kapila et al. [ | |
Evidence on systemic treatments for genital psoriasis by medication
| Medication | Successful | Unsuccessful |
|---|---|---|
| Phototherapy | ||
| UVB phototherapy | Kapila et al. [ | |
| PUVA | Albert et al. [ | |
| Immunosuppressants | ||
| Mycophenolate mofetil | Guglielmetti et al. [ | |
| Methotrexate | Albert et al. [ | Guglielmetti et al. [ |
| Biologics | ||
| Adalimumab | Ješe et al. [ | |
| Ixekizumab | Ryan et al. [ | |
| | Cassano et al. [ | |
| Oral antifungals | Foureur et al. [ | J Fam Pract 2016 [ |
| Oral antibiotics | Quan et al. [ | Singh et al. [ |
| Dapsone | Guglielmetti et al. [ | |
| Doxepin | Albert et al. [ | |
| Antihistamines | Cretu et al. [ | |
| Antipsychotics | Shimamoto et al. [ | |
| Calcium gluconate | Cretu et al. [ | |
aFormerly available treatment
Studies on treatments for genital psoriasis in children and infants
| Sources | Study characteristics | Treatments and outcomes | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study design, level of evidence | Type of psoriasis | Site | Age | Cohort (M/F) | Successful | Unsuccessful | Result | |
| Afsar et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Napkin psoriasis | Diaper area | 5.5 months | 1 M | 0.05% clobetasone 17-butyrate cream daily, emollient cream | – | Overall regression with intermittent mild flares |
| Amichai et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Plaque psoriasis | Glans penis, distal parts of shaft | 10 years | 1 M | 1% pimecrolimus cream | Betamethasone 1% cream, calcipotriol ointment | Resolution of psoriatic lesions after 3 weeks of topical pimecrolimus, recurrence treated successfully |
| Andersen et al. [ | Open-label case series, 4 | Psoriasiform napkin dermatitis | Diaper area | 2.1 months (0–21) | 35 M/32 F | Tar (64), corticosteroid-vioform ointment (3) | Zinc paste, salicylic ointment, steroid ointment, or aniline dye solutions | Tar effective in 64 patients, corticosteroid-vioform ointment effective in 3 patients |
| Baggio et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Psoriasiform napkin dermatitis | Diaper area | 18 months | 1 F | Fluticasone propionate cream | Zinc oxide-based ointments, antifungal creams, desonide cream | Complete resolution at 1 week |
| Creţu et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Napkin psoriasis | Anogenital area, buttocks, upper 1/3 thighs | 4 months | 1 M | Systemic antihistamines, nonspecific desensitization treatment, rigorous hygiene, non-fluorinated topical corticosteroids | Antibiotic ointment for 5 days, calcium gluconate, topical corticosteroids | Significant improvement by day 2 of treatment |
| Fergusson et al. [ | Open-label case series, 4 | Psoriasiform napkin dermatitis | Diaper area | Infants | 22a | Zinc-oxide paste | Topical steroids | Complete clearance |
| Fischer et al. [ | Open-label case series, 4 | Plaque psoriasis | Vulva | 6 years (2–12) | 27 F | LPC and topical calcipotriol with 1% hydrocortisone (23) or methylprednisolone aceponate 0.1% ointment (4) | – | Symptom remission, LPC well tolerated |
| Greco et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Napkin psoriasis | Diaper area | 18 months | 1 F | – | Zinc oxide paste, nystatin, hydrocortisone acetate 2.5% ointment | Minimal improvement |
| Hernandez et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Vulvar psoriasis | Vulva, perianal area | 5 years | 1 F | Clobetasol 0.05% ointment twice daily | Triamcinolone 0.1% ointment twice daily | Significantly improved erythema on inner labial and perianal areas at 2 weeks, complete resolution at 4 weeks |
| Kamer et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Napkin psoriasis | Diaper area | 10 weeks | 1 F | Low-potency topical corticosteroids | – | Clearance of lesions at 2 weeks |
| Rattet et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Psoriasiform napkin dermatitis | Diaper area | 12 months | 1 F | Clomitrazole 1% cream, hydrocortisone 1% cream three times daily | – | Clearance of lesions at 2 weeks with mild erythema |
| Rattet et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Psoriasiform napkin dermatitis | Diaper area | 5 weeks | 1 M | Clomitrazole 1% cream, hydrocortisone 1% cream three times daily | – | Clearance of lesions at 4 weeks |
| Watanabe et al. [ | Case report, 5 | Pustular psoriasis | Diaper area | 4 months | 1 M | 0.2% ketoconazole cream daily | – | Complete clearance at 1 month |
LPC liquor picis carbonis
aUnspecified sex