Topology of psoriasis in routine care: results from high-resolution analysis of 2009 patients

Standard

Topology of psoriasis in routine care: results from high-resolution analysis of 2009 patients. / Augustin, M; Sommer, R; Kirsten, N; Danckworth, A; Radtke, M A; Reich, K; Thaci, D; Boehncke, W H; Langenbruch, A; Mrowietz, U.

in: BRIT J DERMATOL, Jahrgang 181, Nr. 2, 08.2019, S. 358-365.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Augustin, M, Sommer, R, Kirsten, N, Danckworth, A, Radtke, MA, Reich, K, Thaci, D, Boehncke, WH, Langenbruch, A & Mrowietz, U 2019, 'Topology of psoriasis in routine care: results from high-resolution analysis of 2009 patients', BRIT J DERMATOL, Jg. 181, Nr. 2, S. 358-365. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjd.17403

APA

Augustin, M., Sommer, R., Kirsten, N., Danckworth, A., Radtke, M. A., Reich, K., Thaci, D., Boehncke, W. H., Langenbruch, A., & Mrowietz, U. (2019). Topology of psoriasis in routine care: results from high-resolution analysis of 2009 patients. BRIT J DERMATOL, 181(2), 358-365. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjd.17403

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{b7aa35f4e2a743bf8553b6c8fc3a5670,
title = "Topology of psoriasis in routine care: results from high-resolution analysis of 2009 patients",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Different phenotypes have been described in psoriasis. Few details are known about the topology of patients in routine care.OBJECTIVES: To characterize the frequency and distribution of body sites affected by psoriasis in Germany.METHODS: Data from a national cross-sectional study (PsoHealth2) were analysed. Each practice consecutively recruited 20 patients independently of treatment. Topical distribution was identified with a detailed grid scheme of 1424 squares filled by the patient. Psoriasis history, clinical findings, comorbidity and patient-reported outcomes were obtained.RESULTS: In total, 2009 patients with psoriasis were observed. Nineteen per cent of patients had psoriatic arthritis, 65·4% had scalp involvement and 35·6% had nail involvement; in 40·5% of patients, their first-degree relatives also had psoriasis. In total, 1927 (95·9%) provided complete grid data. The mean number of grids marked was 152·4 ± 193·2, corresponding to 10·7% of body surface area. The most frequently affected body areas were the elbows, knees, lower legs and scalp (65-78%). In a linear regression analysis (corrected R² = 0·093), the strongest predictors of reductions in health-related quality of life (HRQoL), measured by the Dermatology Life Quality Index, were having the hands (β = 0·147; P = 0·000), arms (β = 0·097; P = 0·008), genitals (β = 0·080; P = 0·010), neck (β = -0·072; P = 0·043), scalp (β = 0·068; P = 0·010) and nails affected (β = 0·064; P = 0·005).CONCLUSIONS: Typical psoriatic lesions are found in real-world care. However, smaller areas are important determinants of reductions in HRQoL.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "M Augustin and R Sommer and N Kirsten and A Danckworth and Radtke, {M A} and K Reich and D Thaci and Boehncke, {W H} and A Langenbruch and U Mrowietz",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2018 British Association of Dermatologists.",
year = "2019",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1111/bjd.17403",
language = "English",
volume = "181",
pages = "358--365",
journal = "BRIT J DERMATOL",
issn = "0007-0963",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Topology of psoriasis in routine care: results from high-resolution analysis of 2009 patients

AU - Augustin, M

AU - Sommer, R

AU - Kirsten, N

AU - Danckworth, A

AU - Radtke, M A

AU - Reich, K

AU - Thaci, D

AU - Boehncke, W H

AU - Langenbruch, A

AU - Mrowietz, U

N1 - © 2018 British Association of Dermatologists.

PY - 2019/8

Y1 - 2019/8

N2 - BACKGROUND: Different phenotypes have been described in psoriasis. Few details are known about the topology of patients in routine care.OBJECTIVES: To characterize the frequency and distribution of body sites affected by psoriasis in Germany.METHODS: Data from a national cross-sectional study (PsoHealth2) were analysed. Each practice consecutively recruited 20 patients independently of treatment. Topical distribution was identified with a detailed grid scheme of 1424 squares filled by the patient. Psoriasis history, clinical findings, comorbidity and patient-reported outcomes were obtained.RESULTS: In total, 2009 patients with psoriasis were observed. Nineteen per cent of patients had psoriatic arthritis, 65·4% had scalp involvement and 35·6% had nail involvement; in 40·5% of patients, their first-degree relatives also had psoriasis. In total, 1927 (95·9%) provided complete grid data. The mean number of grids marked was 152·4 ± 193·2, corresponding to 10·7% of body surface area. The most frequently affected body areas were the elbows, knees, lower legs and scalp (65-78%). In a linear regression analysis (corrected R² = 0·093), the strongest predictors of reductions in health-related quality of life (HRQoL), measured by the Dermatology Life Quality Index, were having the hands (β = 0·147; P = 0·000), arms (β = 0·097; P = 0·008), genitals (β = 0·080; P = 0·010), neck (β = -0·072; P = 0·043), scalp (β = 0·068; P = 0·010) and nails affected (β = 0·064; P = 0·005).CONCLUSIONS: Typical psoriatic lesions are found in real-world care. However, smaller areas are important determinants of reductions in HRQoL.

AB - BACKGROUND: Different phenotypes have been described in psoriasis. Few details are known about the topology of patients in routine care.OBJECTIVES: To characterize the frequency and distribution of body sites affected by psoriasis in Germany.METHODS: Data from a national cross-sectional study (PsoHealth2) were analysed. Each practice consecutively recruited 20 patients independently of treatment. Topical distribution was identified with a detailed grid scheme of 1424 squares filled by the patient. Psoriasis history, clinical findings, comorbidity and patient-reported outcomes were obtained.RESULTS: In total, 2009 patients with psoriasis were observed. Nineteen per cent of patients had psoriatic arthritis, 65·4% had scalp involvement and 35·6% had nail involvement; in 40·5% of patients, their first-degree relatives also had psoriasis. In total, 1927 (95·9%) provided complete grid data. The mean number of grids marked was 152·4 ± 193·2, corresponding to 10·7% of body surface area. The most frequently affected body areas were the elbows, knees, lower legs and scalp (65-78%). In a linear regression analysis (corrected R² = 0·093), the strongest predictors of reductions in health-related quality of life (HRQoL), measured by the Dermatology Life Quality Index, were having the hands (β = 0·147; P = 0·000), arms (β = 0·097; P = 0·008), genitals (β = 0·080; P = 0·010), neck (β = -0·072; P = 0·043), scalp (β = 0·068; P = 0·010) and nails affected (β = 0·064; P = 0·005).CONCLUSIONS: Typical psoriatic lesions are found in real-world care. However, smaller areas are important determinants of reductions in HRQoL.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1111/bjd.17403

DO - 10.1111/bjd.17403

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 30430557

VL - 181

SP - 358

EP - 365

JO - BRIT J DERMATOL

JF - BRIT J DERMATOL

SN - 0007-0963

IS - 2

ER -