Treatment utilization and drug survival of systemic medications among commercially insured children with psoriasis.

2021 
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES Systemic medications and phototherapy are used to treat pediatric psoriasis, but real-world data on treatment utilization and persistence are limited. The study objective was to determine systemic and phototherapy treatment utilization and compare drug survival among systemics in pediatric psoriasis. METHODS Using United States commercial insurance claims data, a cross-sectional analysis was conducted to describe the prevalence of systemic treatment and phototherapy use among patients <18 years old with psoriasis. We compared drug survival among new users of methotrexate, adalimumab, etanercept, and ustekinumab using a retrospective cohort design. RESULTS Among 13 759 patients, 14.6% used systemic or phototherapy treatment during 2001-2016, with rising utilization of systemics over this period. Among 579 new users of methotrexate, adalimumab, etanercept, and ustekinumab, the median durations of the initial treatment course were 141 (IQR 59-314), 179 (79-339), 175 (90-419), and 216 (64-435) days, respectively (P = .04). Drug discontinuation was less likely among ustekinumab (HR 0.47 [95% CI 0.27-0.83]), etanercept (0.74 [0.59-0.92]), and adalimumab (0.75 [0.55-1.02]) initiators than methotrexate initiators after adjustment for sociodemographic factors and psoriatic arthritis. Drug survival differences were limited to systemic-naive patients. Potential limitations include short follow-up and residual confounding. CONCLUSIONS Utilization of systemic therapies for pediatric psoriasis is increasing, but differences in drug survival exist.
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