Secukinumab Loss of Efficacy Is Perfectly Counteracted by the Introduction of Combination Therapy (Rescue Therapy): Data from a Multicenter Real-Life Study in a Cohort of Italian Psoriatic Patients That Avoided Secukinumab Switching

Giovanni Damiani, Giulia Odorici, Alessia Pacifico, Aldo Morrone, Rosalynn R.Z. Conic, Tima Davidson, Abdulla Watad, Paolo D.M. Pigatto, Delia Colombo, Piergiorgio Malagoli, Marco Fiore*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Since psoriasis (PsO) is a chronic inflammatory disease, patients may experience a drug failure also with very effective drugs (i.e., secukinumab) and, consequently, dermatologists have two therapeutic options: switching or perform a combination therapy (rescue therapy) to save the drug that had decreased its efficacy. At the moment no studies focused on combination/rescue therapy of secukinumab, so we performed a 52-weeks multicenter retrospective observational study that involved 40 subjects with plaque psoriasis that experienced a secondary failure and were treated with combination therapy (ciclosporin (n = 11), MTX (n = 15), NB-UVB (n = 7) and apremilast (n = 7)). After 16 weeks of rescue/combination therapy, PASI and a DLQI varied respectively from 8 [7.0–9.0] and 13 [12.0–15.0], to 3 [2.8–4.0] and 3 [2.0–3.3]), suggesting a significant improvement of daily functionality and quality of life. Results were maintained at 52 weeks. No side effects were experienced during the study. Secukinumab remains a safety and effective drug for PsO patients also in the IL-23 and JAK inhibitors era. The rescue therapy is a valid therapeutic option in case of secukinumab secondary failure.

Original languageEnglish
Article number95
JournalPharmaceuticals
Volume15
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2022

Funding

FundersFunder number
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases5 T32 AR 7569-22

    Keywords

    • Biologic multifailure
    • Combination therapy
    • IL-17 inhibitors
    • Psoriasis
    • Secukinumab

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