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Published in: Dermatology and Therapy 8/2022

Open Access 21-07-2022 | Vulgar Psoriasis | Original Research

Demographic and Clinical Factors Associated with Patient-Reported Remission in Psoriatic Arthritis

Authors: George Gondo, Megan Mosca, Julie Hong, Emanual Maverakis, Joseph F. Merola, April W. Armstrong, Tina Bhutani, Stacie J. Bell, Wilson Liao

Published in: Dermatology and Therapy | Issue 8/2022

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Abstract

Introduction

Achievement of remission in psoriatic arthritis is a key goal for patients and clinicians, yet definitions of remission may vary. Previous efforts have utilized multidomain measures such as minimal disease activity that assess the status of joints, skin, and function to determine current level of psoriatic arthritis (PsA) disease activity. The goal of this study is to identify factors associated with patient-reported psoriatic arthritis remission.

Methods

The National Psoriasis Foundation conducted a cross-sectional study using an online survey of a random stratified sample of 1570 individuals with psoriatic disease in the USA. Participants were asked about a provider diagnosis of psoriasis and/or psoriatic arthritis, comorbid conditions, and psoriatic arthritis impact and disease activity, and demographic questions. All participants reporting a physician-given diagnosis of psoriatic arthritis were asked if they felt their psoriatic arthritis was in remission (“Do you feel your psoriatic arthritis is in remission?” Yes/No/Unsure) and, if so, length of remission. Individuals with psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis reporting a body surface area impacted by psoriasis 3% or less were asked if they felt their psoriasis was in remission. Psoriatic arthritis disease activity and impact was assessed using the nine-question Psoriatic Arthritis Impact of Disease (PsAID-9) instrument and a global PsA-related quality of life question. PsAID-9 scores ≤ 4 were used to indicate acceptable disease state. Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify factors associated with patient-perceived PsA remission.

Results

Of 834 participants with PsA, including 76 (4.8%) with PsA without skin involvement ever, 144 (17.3%) felt their psoriatic arthritis was in remission, with an average remission duration of 43 months. Of those in remission, 116 (78.4%) reported currently using a treatment for their PsA, with most (75.7%) reporting using a biologic therapy for their PsA in the past 12 months. Multivariate logistic regression revealed that patient-perceived psoriatic arthritis remission was independently associated with experiencing acceptable disease state (PsAID-9 ≤ 4), perception of psoriasis remission, lower impact of PsA on global quality of life, and non-white race. Age, sex, body mass index, or biologic use in the last 12 months were not associated with patient-reported PsA remission.

Conclusion

Overall, patient perception of PsA remission was most strongly associated with patient-reported psoriasis remission.
Literature
Metadata
Title
Demographic and Clinical Factors Associated with Patient-Reported Remission in Psoriatic Arthritis
Authors
George Gondo
Megan Mosca
Julie Hong
Emanual Maverakis
Joseph F. Merola
April W. Armstrong
Tina Bhutani
Stacie J. Bell
Wilson Liao
Publication date
21-07-2022
Publisher
Springer Healthcare
Published in
Dermatology and Therapy / Issue 8/2022
Print ISSN: 2193-8210
Electronic ISSN: 2190-9172
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13555-022-00770-6

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