Litcius/Paper detail

Managing Psoriatic Arthritis Patients Presenting with Axial Symptoms

Denis Poddubnyy

2023Drugs13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Axial symptoms (i.e., back pain) are common in the general population. At the same time 25-70% of patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) exhibit signs of inflammatory axial involvement (axial PsA). The presence of unexplained chronic (duration ≥ 3 months) back pain in a patient with psoriasis or PsA should trigger evaluation of the presence of axial involvement. Evaluation of axial involvement normally involves imaging of the axial skeleton (sacroiliac joints and/or spine) in addition to clinical and laboratory evaluation. Symptomatic patients with confirmed axial PsA are treated with a combination of non-pharmacologic and pharmacologic methods including the use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, tumour necrosis factor, interleukin 17, and Janus kinase inhibitors. Interleukin 23 blockade might also be effective in the axial domain of PsA; a dedicated clinical study is ongoing at present. Safety considerations, patient preference, as well as the presence of other disease manifestations (especially of extra-musculoskeletal manifestations-clinically relevant psoriasis, acute anterior uveitis, inflammatory bowel disease), define the choice of a specific drug or drug class.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePsoriatic arthritisPsoriasisUveitisAxial skeletonAnkylosing spondylitisArthritisInflammatory bowel diseaseAxial spondyloarthritisInflammatory arthritisPopulationInternal medicineDiseaseSurgeryDermatologyImmunologySacroiliitisEnvironmental healthAnatomySpondyloarthritis Studies and TreatmentsPsoriasis: Treatment and PathogenesisRheumatoid Arthritis Research and Therapies