Journal of Dermatological Treatment (Jul 2022)

Inadequate response and treatment patterns in adults diagnosed with atopic dermatitis and treated with topical therapy

  • Magdaliz Gorritz,
  • Natalie N. Boytsov,
  • Orin M. Goldblum,
  • William N. Malatestinic,
  • Xin Wang,
  • Rolin L. Wade

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/09546634.2021.1981813
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 33, no. 5
pp. 2510 – 2517

Abstract

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Background Treatment for atopic dermatitis (AD) is complex, particularly in patients with inadequate response to topical therapies. Currently, there is little clinical guidance for the treatment of these patients. Methods A real-world retrospective study utilizing electronic medical records (EMR) and administrative claims data selected patients with AD between January 01 2016 and June 30 2018. Patients had a written prescription for a topical therapy (first observed script = index date) and no prior systemic treatment. Disease severity at index, follow-up treatment response and prescriptions patterns were assessed. A subset of patients linked to claims was evaluated for treatment patterns. Results We identified 137,214 adult topical-treated AD patients with no prior systemic therapy. Among the 16,035 patients with available Physician Global Assessment (PGA) at index, 8169 (50.9%) had the moderate-to-severe disease. Among these patients, 60% had an inadequate response to topical therapy. Of 4475 patients linked to claims, 13.0% had claims for systemic therapy during follow-up, most initiated systemic steroids (95.2%), and oral immunosuppressants and biologics were initiated in 3.3% and 3.8%, respectively. Conclusion In this real-world study, inadequate response to topical therapy among moderate-to-severe AD patients was high and initiation of systemic treatment was low which suggests a need for additional AD-indicated systemic treatment options in this patient population.

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