医学
银屑病
德尔菲法
银屑病面积及严重程度指数
德尔菲
家庭医学
梅德林
物理疗法
皮肤病科
政治学
数学
计算机科学
统计
操作系统
法学
作者
April Armstrong,George Gondo,Joseph F. Merola,Alyssa Roberts,Lourdes M. Pérez-Chada,Deepak Balak,Guy S. Eakin,Charlotte Read,Stephanie T. Le,Yasmin Gutierrez,Tina Bhutani,Andrew Blauvelt,Kristina Callis Duffin,Steven Fakharzadeh,Steven R. Feldman,Joel M. Gelfand,Dafna D. Gladman,Brad Glick,Lawrence J. Green,George Han
标识
DOI:10.1001/jamadermatol.2025.1625
摘要
Importance Defining on-treatment remission in plaque psoriasis is important for benchmarking patient responses to therapies. This also helps to facilitate shared understanding, align treatment expectations, and enable more effective psoriasis management. Objective To establish a consensus-based definition of on-treatment remission for plaque psoriasis through a multistage Delphi initiative. Evidence Review The Remission Workgroup from the medical board and scientific advisory board of the National Psoriasis Foundation engaged various stakeholders, both US based and international, to participate in the consensus process. Following a working group meeting to determine the overall consensus approach, a systematic review of remission definitions in the current literature was performed. This review helped to inform the content of consensus materials. The consensus effort involved 2 stages: pre-Delphi interviews and surveys to inform the Delphi questions, followed by a Delphi exercise with physicians to define on-treatment remission for plaque psoriasis. Outcome measures considered included body surface area (BSA), Investigator Global Assessment (IGA), the product of the Physician Global Assessment and body surface area (PGA × BSA), and Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score at various cutoff levels and time points. Findings The consensus process involved 92 stakeholders, including dermatologists, rheumatologists, researchers, patients, payers, and life sciences professionals. In the pre-Delphi interviews and surveys, patients emphasized that on-treatment remission meant the absence of psoriasis signs and symptoms while recieving therapy. Payers expressed that defining remission is important for long-term treatment coverage. Following the Delphi exercise and discussion with participating physicians specializing in psoriatic disease management, on-treatment remission in plaque psoriasis was defined as patients maintaining a BSA of 0% or IGA of 0 for at least 6 months while on treatment. Conclusions and Relevance Through a Delphi consensus process, on-treatment remission for plaque psoriasis was defined as patients maintaining a BSA involvement of 0% or IGA of 0 for at least 6 months while on treatment. This clear and standardized benchmark is applicable to both research and practice settings.
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