0521779407-17 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:19
Psoriasis 1239
■PUVA (photochemotherapy)
➣Office based procedure given 2 or 3 times per week
➣Psoralen (Oxsoralen ultra) is given based on body weight 1 hour
prior to therapy
➣Contraindications
History of photosensitivity diseases
History or presence of skin cancer
Inability to come to an office with appropriate equipment
■PUVA should not be administered in an uncontrolled setting – e.g. a
tanning salon
■PUVA may be combined with systemic retinoids to enhance the effect
and to limit the development of squamous cell carcinoma
Systemic Therapies
■Methotrexate
➣Indication – disabling psoriasis, not responsive to less toxic ther-
apy, generally >20% surface involvement, or disease of the hands
➣Begin at low dose (5 mg/week) and escalate gradually to 20–30
mg/wk
■Acitretin
➣Indications for treatment
Pustular psoriasis, erythrodermic psoriasis, PUVA or UVB fail-
ure
■Cyclosporine
➣Indications for treatment – Patients with extensive psoriasis who
have failed less toxic therapies
■Biologic agents
➣Anti-TNF agents – etanercept, infliximab and adalimumab are
approved for psoriasis (E) and psoriatic arthritis (E, I, A).
Contraindicated in patients with active infection, history of
tuberculosis, neurologic disease (particularly multiple sclero-
sis), unstable cardiac disease. May predispose to a greater risk
of lymphoma.
➣Efalizumab – affects T cells and their ability to migrate into the
skin
➣Alefacept – causes T-cell apoptosis; 20% of patients might have
long-lasting remissions
follow-up
■Assess response to therapy monthly, monitor blood tests in patients
on methotrexate, acitretin or cyclosporine every 2–4 weeks initially,
then every 2–3 months once on stable dosage