Journal of Dermatological Treatment (Dec 2024)

Prescribing patterns and persistence of biological therapies for psoriasis management: a retrospective cohort study from Saudi Arabia

  • Ahmad Alamer,
  • Wejdan Alyazidi,
  • Saad Aldosari,
  • Fatimah Mobarki,
  • Sarah Almakki,
  • Abdullah Alahmari,
  • Mukhtar Alomar,
  • Ziyad Almalki,
  • Tuqa Alkaff,
  • Mohammad Fazel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/09546634.2024.2386973
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 35, no. 1

Abstract

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Background Biological therapies are effective for psoriasis, but patient responses vary, often requiring therapy switching or discontinuation.Objectives To identify physicians’ prescribing patterns of biological therapies at a referral tertiary center in Saudi Arabia and assess the probability of biologic persistence following treatment initiation.Methods We conducted a retrospective study of biologic-naïve adult psoriasis patients who initiated therapy from October 2013 to July 2022 in Dammam. Descriptive statistics and a Kaplan-Meier analysis evaluated treatment persistence at 6, 12, 24, and 36 months.Results A total of 151 patients received adalimumab (n = 89), etanercept (n = 17), risankizumab (n = 30), ustekinumab (n = 14), and ixekizumab (n = 1). At 6 months, all therapies demonstrated 100% persistence. At 12 months, persistence was highest for ustekinumab (100%) and lowest for etanercept (88.2%). At 24 months, ustekinumab maintained 100% persistence, followed by risankizumab (96.6%), adalimumab (94.3%), and etanercept (76.4%). At 36 months, risankizumab had the highest persistence (96.6%), followed by adalimumab (83.1%), ustekinumab (78%), and etanercept (70.6%). The most common reasons for discontinuation were lack of effectiveness and intolerability.Conclusion This study shows changing psoriasis treatment patterns with new therapies. Risankizumab demonstrated high long-term persistence, while etanercept and ustekinumab showed declining persistence, suggesting evolving treatment considerations.

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