| Literature DB >> 32953323 |
Nida Aslam1, Hajra Saleem2, Salikh Murtazaliev3, Sohail J Quazi4,5, Safeera Khan3.
Abstract
Psoriasis is a chronic immune-mediated skin disorder. Due to lack of clarity in its pathogenesis, a cure with existing treatment is a big challenge. Biologics, a revolutionary treatment, are potent immunomodulators that explicitly target the culprit cells of the immune system to achieve the maximum level of Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score (75 to 90) and clear or almost clear skin in moderate to severe psoriasis. They have been a successful therapy in adult severe psoriasis for a decade. In recent years, biologics have unprecedently sought the attention of the pediatric psoriatic population by proving an efficacious and safe option. The aim of the study is to provide a systematic review of efficacy, safety, and impact on the quality of life of Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved biologics, namely etanercept and ustekinumab, and their use as a "first-line systemic therapy" in the moderate to severe pediatric and adolescent psoriatic population. We explored PubMed, Cochrane Library, Google Scholar, American Academy of Dermatology website, ClinicalTrials.gov, the FDA site, and the National Psoriasis Foundation USA site as major database searches. Psoriasis, pediatric, etanercept, and ustekinumab were keywords used to find the relevant literature. Clinical trials and observational studies were retrieved and analyzed to assess the efficacy and safety of FDA-approved biologics as first-line systemic therapy in pediatric psoriasis. The relevant evidence-based studies and the Joint American Academy of Dermatology-National Psoriasis Foundation (AAD-NPF) guideline have shown that etanercept and ustekinumab biologics are significantly effective and safe systemic therapies in dealing with moderate to severe psoriasis in pediatric and adolescent patients and have unprecedently improved their quality of life. Thus, they can be confidently considered as first-line systemic therapy in moderate to severe pediatric and adolescent psoriatic patients by applying the specific criteria and proper monitoring. However, health practitioners and dermatologists must educate pediatric patients and their caretakers about their adverse effects, success/failure chance, careful monitoring, and follow-up plan to achieve the desired result.Entities:
Keywords: etanercept; pediatric; psoriasis; ustekinumab
Year: 2020 PMID: 32953323 PMCID: PMC7494414 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.9812
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram
PMC: PubMed Central, AAD: American Academy of Dermatology, NPF: National Psoriasis Foundation
Data from the studies with the conclusion
PASI: Psoriasis Area and Severity Index
| AUTHOR AND YEAR OF STUDIES. | TYPES OF STUDY | NO OF PATIENTS | STUDY PURPOSE | CONCLUSION/RESULT |
| Paller et al., 2010 [ | clinical trial | 182 | To determine the efficacy and safety of etanercept in pediatric psoriasis. | Etanercept was safe and effective in the pediatric population. |
| Paller et al., 2015 [ | clinical trial | 182 | To find the safety and efficacy of etanercept in pediatric psoriasis. | Etanercept was well tolerated and effective in pediatric psoriatic patients. |
| Siegfried EC, 2010 [ | clinical trial | 138 | To evaluate the efficacy and safety of etanercept by injecting intermittently in the psoriatic pediatric population. | Etanercept therapy appeared safe by injecting intermittently in pediatric. 80% patients achieved PASI 75 without showing any serious side effects. |
| Langley RG, 2010 [ | clinical trial | 211 | To assess the health-related quality of life Impact of etanercept versus placebo in psoriatic pediatric patients. | Health-related quality of life (hrqol) was significantly improved in the etanercept's group as compared to the placebo. |
| Di Lernia V, et al., 2017 [ | Observational study | 23 | To evaluate efficacy, tolerance, and discontinuation reason of etanercept in the pediatric population. | Etanercept monotherapy was efficacious and well-tolerated in real-life cohort pediatric patients. |
| Landells I, 2015[ | clinical trial | 110 | To determine efficacy and standard safe dose of ustekinumab without any adverse effects in adolescents (12-17 years) psoriatic population. | The standard dose (0.75 mg/kg) of ustekinumab with a bodyweight ≤60 was significantly effective in adolescent psoriatic patients without any hazardous adverse effects. |
| Bronckers IM, 2017 [ | An observational study (cohort) | 390 | To evaluate the therapeutic use and relative risk of systematic agents including biological and non-biological therapies in pediatric psoriatic patients. | Biologic showed less adverse effects as compared to the conventional systemic agent (methotrexate). Out of 106, only four patients on biologics left treatment, while 44 pts from >370 discontinued conventional therapy due to ≥ one adverse effect. |
| Klufas DM, 2016 [ | case series | 51 | To assess the better systemic drug therapy for moderate to severe psoriasis in pediatric patients. | It demonstrated that biological therapy was safe, well-tolerated as compared to traditional systemic therapies in moderate to severe psoriatic pediatric patients. It also showed the safety of combination therapy (biologics + methotrexate) and suggested that it can be used for better response in relapsing psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis. |
| Bronckers IM, 2020 [ | Observational study | 234 | To find the psoriasis severity reduction in real-world practice and drug survival of biologics versus methotrexate in pediatric psoriasis. | Biologics were highly effective, safe, and had better drug survival in the long-term period as compared to methotrexate in pediatric psoriasis. |
| Phan C, 2019 [ | Observational study | 134 | To assess the difference in the selection/outcome of biologic in real-life practice versus clinical trials. | This study suggests that the selection of biological therapy in real-life practice differs or hard to match from clinical trial’s criteria of biologics in the pediatric psoriatic population due to the strict eligibility parameters. |
Figure 2Age-wise distribution of psoriasis
Figure 3Biologics for the pediatric population of psoriasis
FDA: Food and Drug Administration; EMA: European Medical Authority
Figure 4Treatment algorithm for the moderate to severe pediatric psoriasis according to Joint AAD-NPF guideline 2020
*all kind/types
AAD-NPF: American Academy of Dermatology-National Psoriasis Foundation
Summary of FDA approved biologics in pediatric psoriasis
Adapted from Fortina et al. [12]
TB: tuberculosis; HCV: Hepatitis C virus; HBV: Hepatitis B virus
| DESCRIPTION | ETANERCEPT | USTEKINUMUMAB |
| FDA approval for Pediatric moderate to severe Psoriasis | yes | yes |
| Age | ≥6 years | ≥12 years |
| Working Mechanism | human fusion protein which combines with a soluble fusion protein of TNF-α | A human monoclonal antibody which binds to p40 Subunit of IL 12-23 |
| Route of administration | subcutaneous | subcutaneous |
| Recommended baseline monitoring parameters | TB, HIV, HCV, HBV screening incl: chest radiographs | TB, HIV, HCV, HBV screening incl: chest radiographs |
| Recommended dose | 0.8 mg/kg weekly . if ≥ 63 kg, 50 mg. | 0.75 mg/kg/dose (<60 kg). 45 mg (60 to ≤ 1oo kg). 90 mg (>100 kg) by week 0, 4, and every 12 weeks. |
| Absolute contraindication | Active infections including active TB, hepatitis | Active infections including active TB, hepatitis |
| Adverse effects | Primary AE (injection site reaction), Infections | Primary AE (injection site reaction), Infections |