Wednesday, March 11th 2020, 3:01 pm
The treatment of psoriasis—an autoimmune disease that creates red, scaly plaques on the skin—depends on multiple factors, but two big factors include the severity and the location of the symptoms, according to Michelle Henry, MD, dermatologist in New York City and clinical instructor at Weill Cornell Medical College.
Topical treatments are the mainstay of treatments for psoriasis. These creams and gels are applied directly to the skin, so they can help reduce the inflammation that’s causing symptoms while causing fewer systemic side effects to the rest of the body.
However, topical treatments aren’t always right, or enough, for all individuals with psoriasis. For example, topical treatments may not be a good fit for someone who has psoriasis plaques covering large portions of the body. Other patients may try topical treatments but not see an improvement in their symptoms. Here are signs your topical psoriasis treatments are working.
“We have a therapeutic ladder where we start with the mildest treatments, and we become more aggressive as the patient needs,” says Dr. Henry.
Light Therapy
When topical treatments aren’t enough, a dermatologist may suggest UV light therapy (either instead of or in addition to topical treatments). “UV light is somewhat anti-inflammatory, and so for the right patient, UV light is a common and effective tool for psoriasis,” says Dr. Henry.
A benefit of UV light therapy, also called phototherapy, is that it can help treat psoriasis that covers large areas of the body. One downfall is that it sometimes requires multiple treatments a week, so it may not be feasible if someone has a challenging schedule to work with.
Oral Medications
“If we're walking up the ladder, and maybe UV light and topical treatments aren't working, we then graduate to using maybe some of the oral medications,” says Dr. Henry.
Unlike topical therapy and light therapy, oral medications are a systemic treatment for psoriasis, meaning it targets the whole body instead of individual areas of plaques. For this reason, oral medications can be very useful for people whose psoriasis symptoms cover more than 5 percent of their body surface area.
Oral medications are classified as either immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory drugs. Essentially, they suppress or modify how the immune system works to calm the immune response that’s causing psoriasis symptoms.
There are many oral medications for psoriasis to choose from, so a dermatologist can really cater the selection to you based on what other comorbidities you have (such as psoriatic arthritis) and the side effect profile of the medication.
Biologic Medications
Biologics are the most aggressive form of treatment against psoriasis, and they’re the most effective against more severe types of psoriasis. Instead of simply suppressing the immune system, they block the action of specific cells or proteins in the immune system that cause psoriasis.
“The biologic medications are actually injectable medications that work on very specific arms of the immune system to quiet them and reduce that excess scale, and those plaques, and that discomfort that our patients have,” says Dr. Henry. Learn more about biologic therapy for psoriasis here.
However, biologic medications are typically more costly than treatments lower on the therapeutic ladder, and they tend to come with more side effects, so—as is true for all medications—the benefits have to be weighed against the risks. In this case, biologic agents are recommended and considered beneficial to people with severe symptoms and with a high risk of complications (such as joint destruction).
“We're really in a great time that if you have psoriasis, there is hopefully a treatment for you because we have a wide range of treatments that are quite effective,” says Dr. Henry.
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March 11th, 2020
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