141 results on '"Maul, Julia-Tatjana'
Search Results
2. Psoriasis localization patterns in the Swiss Psoriasis Registry (SDNTT) over 11 years: an analysis by sex and age
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Birkenmaier, Ion, Maul, Lara Valeska, Oyanguren, Iker, Sorbe, Christina, Fröhlich, Fabienne, Schlapbach, Christoph, Heidemeyer, Kristine, Yawalkar, Nikhil, Boehncke, Wolf-Henning, Ring, Hans-Christian, Thyssen, Jacob P., Egeberg, Alexander, Micheroli, Raphael, Thomsen, Simon Francis, Mainetti, Carlo, Cozzio, Antonio, Kündig, Thomas M., Levesque, Mitchell P., Navarini, Alexander, and Maul, Julia-Tatjana
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- 2024
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3. Brodalumab Versus Guselkumab in Patients with Moderate-to-Severe Psoriasis with an Inadequate Response to Ustekinumab: A Randomized, Multicenter, Double-Blind Phase 4 Trial (COBRA)
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Reich, Kristian, Bianchi, Luca, Khemis, Abdallah, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Tsianakas, Athanasios, Schempp, Christoph M., Petersen, Kim, Noergaard, Mia M., and Puig, Lluis
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- 2024
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4. Cracking the code: unveiling the nexus between atopic dermatitis and addictive behavior: a cross-sectional exploration of risk factors
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Mick, Antonia, Wecker, Hannah, Ziehfreund, Stefanie, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Biedermann, Tilo, and Zink, Alexander
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- 2024
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5. Drug Survival of Adalimumab, Secukinumab, and Ustekinumab in Psoriasis as Determined by Either Dose Escalation or Drug Discontinuation during the First 3 Years of Treatment – a Nationwide Cohort Study
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Thein, David, Rosenø, Nana A.L., Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Wu, Jashin J., Skov, Lone, Bryld, Lars Erik, Rasmussen, Mads K., Ajgeiy, Kawa Khaled, Thomsen, Simon Francis, Thyssen, Jacob P., and Egeberg, Alexander
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- 2023
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6. Comparative Effectiveness of Biologics Across Subgroups of Patients with Moderate-to-Severe Plaque Psoriasis: Results at Week 12 from the PSoHO Study in a Real-World Setting
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Lynde, Charles, Riedl, Elisabeth, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Torres, Tiago, Pinter, Andreas, Fabbrocini, Gabrielle, Daniele, Flavia, Brnabic, Alan, Reed, Catherine, Wilhelm, Stefan, Holzkämper, Thorsten, Schuster, Christopher, and Puig, Luis
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- 2023
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7. Diagnostic performance of augmented intelligence with 2D and 3D total body photography and convolutional neural networks in a high-risk population for melanoma under real-world conditions: A new era of skin cancer screening?
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Cerminara, Sara E., Cheng, Phil, Kostner, Lisa, Huber, Stephanie, Kunz, Michael, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Böhm, Jette S., Dettwiler, Chiara F., Geser, Anna, Jakopović, Cécile, Stoffel, Livia M., Peter, Jelissa K., Levesque, Mitchell, Navarini, Alexander A., and Maul, Lara Valeska
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- 2023
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8. Development and multicenter international validation of a diagnostic tool to differentiate between pemphigoid gestationis and polymorphic eruption of pregnancy
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Xie, Fangyi, Davis, Dawn Marie R., Baban, Farah, Johnson, Emma F., Theiler, Regan N., Todd, Austin, Pruneddu, Sara, Murase, Jenny E., Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Ambros-Rudolph, Christina M., and Lehman, Julia S.
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- 2023
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9. Mediators of Capillary-to-Venule Conversion in the Chronic Inflammatory Skin Disease Psoriasis
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He, Yuliang, Kim, Jihye, Tacconi, Carlotta, Moody, Jonathan, Dieterich, Lothar C., Anzengruber, Florian, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Gousopoulos, Epameinondas, Restivo, Gaetana, Levesque, Mitchell P., Lindenblatt, Nicole, Shin, Jay W., Hon, Chung-Chau, and Detmar, Michael
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- 2022
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10. Prevalence and Characteristics of Chronic Hand Eczema Among Adults in Denmark: A General Population‐Based Study.
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Thein, David, Maul, Julia‐Tatjana, Ribero, Simone, Silverberg, Jonathan I., Egeberg, Alexander, and Thyssen, Jacob P.
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ECZEMA , *STANDARD deviations , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *STATISTICAL sampling , *ADULTS - Abstract
ABSTRACT Background Objective Methods Results Conclusion The epidemiology of chronic hand eczema (CHE) remains poorly examined.To investigate the prevalence of CHE in a general adult population and describe the characteristics of affected individuals.We investigated the prevalence and characteristics of CHE using a random sample from the general Danish population (The Danish Skin Cohort). CHE was defined as eczema on the hands or wrists during a minimum of three consecutive months or reoccurrence of hand eczema at least twice within 12 months.Out of 11 166 adults, 1306 experienced hand eczema (HE) at some point in their lifetime. Within the last 12 months, 408 (3.7%) experienced HE, of which 332 (81.4%) reported CHE. The crude 1‐year period prevalence of CHE was 3.0% (95% confidence interval (CI), 2.7%–3.3%) while the standardised prevalence was 3.5% (95% CI, 3.3%–3.6%). Among adults with CHE, 70.8% were female, and the mean age was 48.0 years (standard deviation 16.6 years). Most individuals with CHE had two relapses (n = 309, 93.1%), while n = 206, 61.1%, had HE for more than 3 months. Compared to HE, CHE was more likely diagnosed by a dermatologist and affect the fingers and back of the hand.The standardised prevalence was 3.5% (95% CI, 3.3%–3.6%) and 4.2% (95% CI, 4.0%–4.4%) for CHE and HE, respectively. We identified a large overlap between HE and CHE (81.4%) in adults from the general population, indicating that many individuals affected by eczema on the hands may experience a chronic course. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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11. Patient and dermatologists' perspectives on augmented intelligence for melanoma screening: A prospective study.
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Goessinger, Elisabeth Victoria, Niederfeilner, Johannes‐Christian, Cerminara, Sara, Maul, Julia‐Tatjana, Kostner, Lisa, Kunz, Michael, Huber, Stephanie, Koral, Emrah, Habermacher, Lea, Sabato, Gianna, Tadic, Andrea, Zimmermann, Carmina, Navarini, Alexander, and Maul, Lara Valeska
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PATIENTS' attitudes ,CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,SKIN cancer ,EARLY detection of cancer - Abstract
Background: Artificial intelligence (AI) shows promising potential to enhance human decision‐making as synergistic augmented intelligence (AuI), but requires critical evaluation for skin cancer screening in a real‐world setting. Objectives: To investigate the perspectives of patients and dermatologists after skin cancer screening by human, artificial and augmented intelligence. Methods: A prospective comparative cohort study conducted at the University Hospital Basel included 205 patients (at high‐risk of developing melanoma, with resected or advanced disease) and 8 dermatologists. Patients underwent skin cancer screening by a dermatologist with subsequent 2D and 3D total‐body photography (TBP). Any suspicious and all melanocytic skin lesions ≥3 mm were imaged with digital dermoscopes and classified by corresponding convolutional neural networks (CNNs). Excisions were performed based on dermatologist's melanoma suspicion, study‐defined elevated CNN risk‐scores and/or melanoma suspicion by AuI. Subsequently, all patients and dermatologists were surveyed about their experience using questionnaires, including quantification of patient's safety sense following different examinations (subjective safety score (SSS): 0–10). Results: Most patients believed AI could improve diagnostic performance (95.5%, n = 192/201). In total, 83.4% preferred AuI‐based skin cancer screening compared to examination by AI or dermatologist alone (3D‐TBP: 61.3%; 2D‐TBP: 22.1%, n = 199). Regarding SSS, AuI induced a significantly higher feeling of safety than AI (mean‐SSS (mSSS): 9.5 vs. 7.7, p < 0.0001) or dermatologist screening alone (mSSS: 9.5 vs. 9.1, p = 0.001). Most dermatologists expressed high trust in AI examination results (3D‐TBP: 90.2%; 2D‐TBP: 96.1%, n = 205). In 68.3% of the examinations, dermatologists felt that diagnostic accuracy improved through additional AI‐assessment (n = 140/205). Especially beginners (<2 years' dermoscopic experience; 61.8%, n = 94/152) felt AI facilitated their clinical work compared to experts (>5 years' dermoscopic experience; 20.9%, n = 9/43). Contrarily, in divergent risk assessments, only 1.5% of dermatologists trusted a benign CNN‐classification more than personal malignancy suspicion (n = 3/205). Conclusions: While patients already prefer AuI with 3D‐TBP for melanoma recognition, dermatologists continue to rely largely on their own decision‐making despite high confidence in AI‐results. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04605822). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Skin diseases among adults in Tasiilaq, East Greenland.
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Haulrig, Morten B., Andersson, Anna M., Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Xu, Jingyuan, Lwin, Su M., Flohr, Carsten, Hove, Lone S., Agner, Tove, Koch, Anders, Griffiths, Christopher E. M., Zachariae, Claus, and Thyssen, Jacob P.
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Cold climate and unique genetic and environmental factors may influence the prevalence of skin diseases in Greenland. However, there is a lack of epidemiological studies on skin diseases in the adult Greenlandic population. To address this unmet need a cross-sectional study, run by dermatologists from Denmark, the UK, and Switzerland estimated the prevalence and clinical manifestations of skin diseases among adults in East Greenland in May 2022. All adults ≥18 years in the town of Tasiilaq were invited, and 295 individuals aged 18–78 years participated (22.5% of the overall adult population in Tasiilaq). Two-hundred and three participants (69%) had visible signs of current skin disease, and among these, 242 cases of dermatoses were identified. The most common skin diseases were hand eczema (22.4%), lichen simplex (9.5%), discoid eczema (7.1%), psoriasis, atopic dermatitis and acne vulgaris (5.8% each). Scabies was the most frequent infectious skin disease (4.4%). No cases of skin cancer were identified. Atopic dermatitis and psoriasis presented with disease that was of limited extent and different from the classical presentations. Skin diseases showed a high prevalence among adults in East Greenland, and some of them were severe. This indicates a noteworthy public health problem that warrants better access to dermatologist support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Association of disease duration and PASI response rates at week 12 in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis receiving biologics in the real-world psoriasis study of health outcomes (PSoHO).
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Pinter, Andreas, Eyerich, Kilian, Costanzo, Antonio, Garrelts, Alyssa, Schuster, Christopher, Mert, Can, Lampropoulou, Anastasia, Fotiou, Konstantinos, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, and Papp, Kim A.
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Purpose: Currently, in the treatment of moderate-to-severe psoriasis (PsO) there is a lack of evidence demonstrating optimal biologic treatment response with respect to disease duration. The aim of this post-hoc analysis, using real world data from the Psoriasis Study of Health Outcomes (PSoHO), is to provide evidence if early intervention with biologics is associated with better treatment outcomes and if there is any difference among drug classes or individual biologics. Materials and methods: For this post-hoc analysis patients were categorised into two subgroups according to shorter (≤2 years) or longer (>2 years) disease duration. Analysis was performed on anti-interleukin (IL)-17A cohort vs other biologics cohort, anti-IL-17A vs other drug classes, and pairwise comparisons of ixekizumab vs individual biologics, provided that the statistical models converged. Analysis investigated the association of disease duration with the proportion of patients achieving 100% improvement in Psoriasis Area Severity Index score (PASI 100) at week 12. Adjusted comparative analyses, reported as odds ratio (OR), were performed using Frequentist Model Averaging (FMA) for each cohort or treatments within each subcategory of the subgroups. Results: At week 12, anti-IL-17A and other biologics cohorts displayed minimal differences in numerical response rate for PASI 100 with respect to disease duration. The anti-IL-17A cohort showed a higher numerical PASI 100 response rate compared to the other biologic cohort irrespective of disease duration (≤2 years: 36.7% vs 21.8%; >2 years: 35.8% vs 21.9%). Conclusion: Overall, the results do not clearly indicate that treating patients early is critical in achieving optimal patient outcomes. Furthermore, patients treated with ixekizumab show numerically higher response rates relative to other individual biologics irrespective of disease duration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Canakinumab Lacks Efficacy in Treating Adult Patients with Moderate to Severe Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria in a Phase II Randomized Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled Single-Center Study
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Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Distler, Meike, Kolios, Antonios, Maul, Lara Valeska, Guillet, Carole, Graf, Nicole, Imhof, Laurence, Lang, Claudia, Navarini, Alexander A., and Schmid-Grendelmeier, Peter
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- 2021
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15. Predictors of initiating biologics in the treatment of psoriasis.
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Linnemann, Emilia, Nielsen, Mia‐Louise, Maul, Lara Valeska, Richter, Clara, Dommann, Isabella, Zink, Alexander, Schlapbach, Christoph, Yawalkar, Nikhil, Conrad, Curdin, Cozzio, Antonio, Kündig, Thomas, Navarini, Alexander, Egeberg, Alexander, and Maul, Julia‐Tatjana
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INDEPENDENT variables ,BIOTHERAPY ,DISEASE progression ,SECONDARY analysis ,BIOLOGICALS - Abstract
Background: Biologics are among the most effective therapies for psoriasis. However, many patients are only introduced to them at advanced stages of the disease course. Objectives: Our aim was to identify predictors of initiating biologic therapy in patients with psoriasis and compare patients initiating biologics early versus late in their disease course. Methods: Kaplan–Meier curves visualized time to biologic initiation, while Cox regression models further explored variables as predictors of biologic initiation. Mann–Whitney U and chi‐squared tests compared patients who started biologics early with those who began biologics later in the disease course. Results: Our primary analysis included 233 psoriasis patients. Cox regression showed that age at diagnosis (P = 0.007), general physical well‐being (P = 0.02), and nail psoriasis severity (P = 0.02) were significantly associated with time to biologic initiation. Our secondary analysis, the comparisons between patients starting biologics early versus later in the disease course, included a total of 378 patients. The median (interquartile range [IQR]) age at diagnosis was 34.5 (25.0–51.2) years for patients initiating biologics within 5 years, compared to 22.0 (15.0–32.8) years for patients initiating biologics later (P < 0.0001). The median (IQR) age at initiation was 37.0 (27.0–53.2) and 45.0 (36.0–55.0) years for patients initiating biologics earlier versus later than 5 years (P = 0.04). Conclusions: Age at diagnosis, general well‐being, and severity of nail psoriasis significantly predicted future initiation of biologic treatment. Patients initiating biologics early in their disease course were generally older at diagnosis but younger at the time of biologic initiation compared to patients initiating biologics later in their disease course. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Global Comparison of COVID-19 Vaccination Rates among Psoriasis Patients.
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Korouri, Edwin, Jeong, Charlotte, Peterson, Hannah, Valenzuela, Fernando, Romiti, Ricardo, Didaskalu, Johannes A., Egeberg, Alexander, Oon, Hazel H., Maul, Lara Valeska, Kingston, Paige, Lee, Kathryn, Huang, Margaret Y., Yee, Danielle, Artiga, Kevin, Aguero, Rosario, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, and Armstrong, April W.
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COVID-19 vaccines ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PSORIASIS ,COVID-19 ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
(1) Background: The purpose of this study is to compare the rate of COVID-19 vaccination among psoriasis patients internationally and to correlate it with their treatment regimens. (2) Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study from January 2021 to October 2022 among adults in the United States (US), Chile, China, Switzerland, and Singapore using the Global Healthcare Study on Psoriasis survey. (3) Results: A total of 310 psoriasis patients in the US (98), Chile (32), China (80), Switzerland (39), and Singapore (61) were surveyed. Of these, 248 patients (80.0%) were vaccinated at least once for COVID-19 (Chile: 100%, Singapore: 100%, US: 93.9%, Switzerland: 69.2%, China: 45.0%). Compared with other countries, patients in China were 89% less likely to report at least one COVID-19 vaccination (1 − 0.11 = 0.89; OR 0.11; 95% CI: 0.03–0.48), and patients in Switzerland were 80% less likely (1 − 0.20 = 0.80; OR 0.20; 95% CI: 0.05–0.79). Compared with patients on biologics, patients on topicals were 10.9 (95% CI: 2.1–56.6) times more likely to report at least one COVID-19 vaccination, and patients on oral systemics were 7.2 times more likely (95% CI: 1.6–31.6). (4) Conclusions: Country of residence and treatment regimen are associated with different COVID-19 vaccination rates in psoriasis patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Gender differences in psoriasis: a Swiss online psoriasis survey
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Murer, Carla, Sgier, David, Mettler, Sofia Kyonhi, Guillet, Carole, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Djamei, Vahid, Navarini, Alexander A., and Anzengruber, Florian
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- 2021
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18. IL-36[gamma] drives skin toxicity induced by EGFR/MEK inhibition and commensal Cutibacterium acnes
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Satoh, Takashi K., Meier-Schiesser, Mark MelletBarbara, Fenini, Gabriele, Otsuka, Atsushi, Beer, Hans-Dietmar, Rordorf, Tamara, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Hafner, Jurg, Navarini, Alexander A., Contasso, Emmanuel, and French, Lars E.
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Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. ,Cetuximab ,Skin care ,Acne ,Genes ,Toxicity ,Dermatologic agents ,Skin ,Epidermal growth factors ,Gene expression ,Scientific equipment industry ,Biochemistry ,Criminal investigation ,Cancer treatment ,Motor vehicle drivers ,Neutrophilia ,Health care industry - Abstract
Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and MEK inhibitors (EGFRi/MEKi) are beneficial for the treatment of solid cancers but are frequently associated with severe therapy-limiting acneiform skin toxicities. The underlying molecular mechanisms are poorly understood. Using gene expression profiling we identified IL-36[gamma] and IL-8 as candidate drivers of EGFRi/MEKi skin toxicity. We provide molecular and translational evidence that EGFRi/MEKi in concert with the skin commensal bacterium Cutibacterium acnes act synergistically to induce IL-36[gamma] in keratinocytes and subsequently IL-8, leading to cutaneous neutrophilia. IL-36[gamma] expression was the combined result of C. acnes-induced NF-[kappa]B activation and EGFRi/MEKi-mediated expression of the transcription factor Kruppel-like factor 4 (KLF4), due to the presence of both NF-[kappa]B and KLF4 binding sites in the human IL-36[gamma] gene promoter. EGFRi/MEKi increased KLF4 expression by blockade of the EGFR/MEK/ERK pathway. These results provide an insight into understanding the pathological mechanism of the acneiform skin toxicities induced by EGFRi/MEKi and identify IL-36[gamma] and the transcription factor KLF4 as potential therapeutic targets., Introduction Agents targeting the epidermal growth factor receptor-mediated (EGFR-mediated) signaling pathway are increasingly used for the treatment of advanced lung, pancreatic, colorectal, and head and neck cancers, which benefit from [...]
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- 2020
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19. Incidence of atopic conditions in people with psoriasis: a population-based analysis
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Kirsten, Natalia, Mohr, Nicole, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, and Augustin, Matthias
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- 2021
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20. Skin Recovery After Discontinuation of Long-Term Moisturizer Application: A Split-Face Comparison Pilot Study
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Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Maul, Lara Valeska, Kägi, Marc, Cheng, Phil, Anzengruber, Florian, von Laue, Mathilde, Chen, Yuki, Kägi, Martin, and Navarini, Alexander
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- 2020
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21. Thermography: High sensitivity and specificity diagnosing contact dermatitis in patch testing
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Anzengruber, Florian, Alotaibi, Fayez, Kaufmann, Lilian S., Ghosh, Adhideb, Oswald, Martin R., Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Meier, Barbara, French, Lars E., Bonmarin, Mathias, and Navarini, Alexander A.
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- 2019
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22. Post-Excision Soft X-Ray Radiotherapy for Keloids: Experience in a Tertiary Referral Center.
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Ramelyte, Egle, Welti, Michèle, Gardin, Fabian, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Dummer, Reinhard, and Imhof, Laurence
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SOFT X rays ,SCARS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,UNIVERSITY hospitals ,INJECTIONS ,KELOIDS - Abstract
Introduction: Keloid is an abnormal proliferation of scar tissue that grows beyond the original margins of the injury. Even after complete resection, recurrences are common and pose a poorly understood challenge in dermatology. There is lack of large prospective clinical trials; thus, treatment recommendations are based on retrospective analyses and small cohort studies. Superficial radiotherapy is recommended in recurrent keloids; however, the successful treatment rates vary greatly. The aim of this study was to evaluate the keloid recurrence rate after post-excision soft X-ray radiotherapy and the associated factors. Methods: We reviewed retrospective data of all patients, treated with adjuvant post-excision soft X-ray radiotherapy with 12 Gy in 6 sessions at the tertiary referral center, Department of Dermatology, University Hospital Zurich, Switzerland, between 2005 and 2018. We analyzed individual keloids as separate cases. Successful treatment was defined as no sign of recurrence within 2 years. Results: Of the 200 identified patients, 90 met the inclusion criteria and were included in the final analysis. In 90 patients, 104 cases of treated keloids were analyzed. Keloids were mainly located on the trunk (49%) and were mostly caused by previous surgery (52.2%). 50% of the keloids did not relapse within 2 years after therapy. A significant factor leading to recurrence was the presence of previous therapy, with prior topical therapies, such as steroid injections or 5-fluorouracil, leading to most relapses. 69.2% of keloid cases who relapsed were pretreated. Soft X-ray radiotherapy was well tolerated, with posttreatment hyperpigmentation noted in 34% of patients, particularly in patients with non-Caucasian origin (61.3%). Conclusion: Treatment of refractory keloids is difficult. Post-excision radiotherapy is an established adjuvant treatment option; nevertheless, recurrence rates are high, especially in pretreated keloids. Prospective studies determining the exact dosage and fraction of post-excisional radiotherapy are needed to determine the optimal radiation parameters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. Patient-reported assessment of medical care for chronic inflammatory skin diseases: an enterprise-based survey.
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Wolk, Kerstin, Schielein, Maximilian, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Widmayer, Fontaine, Wanke, Kerstin, Fischmann, Wolfgang, Nathan, Petra, and Sabat, Robert
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- 2024
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24. Predicting Psoriatic Arthritis in Psoriasis Patients – A Swiss Registry Study.
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Nielsen, Mia-Louise, Petersen, Troels C., Maul, Lara Valeska, Thyssen, Jacob P., Thomsen, Simon F., Wu, Jashin J., Navarini, Alexander A., Kündig, Thomas, Yawalkar, Nikhil, Schlapbach, Christoph, Boehncke, Wolf-Henning, Conrad, Curdin, Cozzio, Antonio, Micheroli, Raphael, Erik Kristensen, Lars, Egeberg, Alexander, and Maul, Julia-Tatjana
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- 2024
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25. Sex differences in adverse events from systemic treatments for psoriasis: A decade of insights from the Swiss Psoriasis Registry (SDNTT).
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Verardi, Fabio, Maul, Lara Valeska, Borsky, Kim, Steinmann, Simona, Rosset, Nina, Pons, Hector Ortega, Sorbe, Christina, Yawalkar, Nikhil, Micheroli, Raphael, Egeberg, Alexander, Thyssen, Jacob P., Heidemeyer, Kristine, Boehncke, Wolf‐Henning, Conrad, Curdin, Cozzio, Antonio, Pinter, Andreas, Kündig, Thomas, Navarini, Alexander A., and Maul, Julia‐Tatjana
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Background: Psoriasis is a disease that often requires prolonged systemic treatment. It is important to determine the safety of available therapies. There is currently little insight into sex‐specific differences in the safety of systemic psoriasis therapies. Objectives: To examine the real‐world, long‐term safety of systemic psoriasis therapies with sex stratification in drug‐related adverse events (ADRs). Methods: Ten‐year data from adults with moderate‐to‐severe psoriasis requiring systemic treatment (conventional systemic therapies [CST], biologics) were obtained from the Swiss psoriasis registry (SDNTT). ADRs were categorized according to the international terminology Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities (MedDRA). Safety was assessed by calculating event rates per 100 patient‐years (PY). We used descriptive statistics for patient and disease characteristics, and binomial and t‐tests to compare treatment groups and sex. Results: In total, 791 patients (290 females) were included with a mean age of 46 years. 358 (45%) received CSTs and 433 (55%) biologics; both groups had similar baseline characteristics except for more joint involvement in patients using biologics (26.86% vs. 14.8%, p < 0.0001). CSTs were associated with a 2.2‐fold higher ADR rate (40.43/100 PY vs. 18.22/100 PY, p < 0.0001) and an 8.0‐fold higher drug‐related discontinuation rate than biologics (0.16/PY vs. 0.02/PY, p < 0.0001). Trends showed non‐significant higher serious adverse event rates per 100 PY for biologics (8.19, CI 6.87–9.68) compared to CSTs (7.08, CI 5.39–9.13) (p = 0.3922). Sex stratification revealed a significantly higher overall ADR rate for all treatments in females (1.8‐fold for CSTs [57.30/100 PY vs. 31.69/100 PY] and 2.0‐fold for biologics [27.36/100 PY vs. 13.9/100 PY], p < 0.0001), and drug‐related discontinuation rates for most CSTs in females. Conclusion: Females were associated with a significantly higher rate of ADRs and drug‐related discontinuation rates. Sex stratification should be taken into consideration when designing studies in the patient‐tailored management of psoriasis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Atypical and Typical Presentation of Erythema Nodosum: Clinical Differences in Treatment and Outcome.
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Meienberger, Nina, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Fröhlich, Fabienne, Maul, Lara Valeska, Kündig, Thomas, Nordmann, Thierry, and Anzengruber, Florian
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ERYTHEMA nodosum ,SARCOIDOSIS ,THIGH ,MEDICAL consultation ,AGE of onset ,DISEASE progression - Abstract
Introduction: Erythema nodosum (EN) is the most common form of panniculitis that predominantly affects the shins. While EN in atypical sites has been described by many authors, there are currently only case studies published on this topic. This study aimed to evaluate clinical differences between patients suffering from EN on the shins, compared to patients with EN in atypical locations. Methods: We analyzed 105 patients in a retrospective, single-center study at a university hospital in Switzerland. Typical EN was defined as lesions, found only on the lower legs, while atypical EN as lesions on the upper legs, trunk, arms, or face, only or in addition to lesions on the lower legs. The patients were assessed for age, gender, dermatologic history, time until first medical consultation, time to diagnosis, and time until remission. Further, etiology, symptoms, and applied therapies were investigated. Findings were then compared between the typical and atypical EN cohorts. Results: Overall, we included 70 patients (37.99 ± 15.67 [3–81] years) with EN solely on the shins and 35 patients (41.27 ± 16.85 [9–76] years) with EN on other locations. Interestingly, time until diagnosis was significantly shorter in atypical EN (p = 0.034, 1.14 ± 4.68 vs. 0.46 ± 1.14 months). Time to remission was similar in both groups (3.61 ± 2.73 vs. 3.05 ± 2.86 months, respectively). Sarcoidosis was the only etiologic factor significantly more frequent in atypical EN compared to typical EN (23% vs. 9%, p = 0.042). Besides that, solely subtle differences were seen regarding etiology, gender, age at onset, course of the disease, and symptoms. Conclusions: Our study suggests that only minor alterations between both study populations exist. Significant differences were found in time to diagnosis (shorter for atypical EN), as well as in sarcoidosis as an etiologic factor (more frequent in atypical EN). While adalimumab was only prescribed in atypical EN cases, prognosis seems to be similar for typical and atypical EN (similar time to remission, similar amount of reoccurring cases). Due to the limited sample size, however, our study population may have been too small to detect the relevant differences, and bigger studies may be needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Long-term drug survival of adalimumab, infliximab, secukinumab and ustekinumab in hidradenitis suppurativa: a Danish nationwide cohort study.
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Ring, Hans Christian, Thorsen, Jonathan, Kirby, Brian, Ingram, John R, Rosenø, Nana Aviaaja Lippert, Holgersen, Nikolaj, Nielsen, Valdemar W, Aagaard, David Nikolai Thein, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Wu, Jashin J, Thyssen, Jacob P, Egeberg, Alexander, and Thomsen, Simon F
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HIDRADENITIS suppurativa ,ADALIMUMAB ,INFLIXIMAB ,COHORT analysis ,BIOTHERAPY ,DRUGS - Abstract
This article presents a Danish nationwide cohort study on the long-term drug survival of biologics in the treatment of hidradenitis suppurativa (HS), a chronic inflammatory skin disease. The study analyzed data from 452 patients who were treated with various biologics between 2005 and 2021. The results showed that the median drug survival time for adalimumab was approximately 8 months, with bio-naïve patients having a significantly longer drug survival time compared to non-naïve patients. The study also reported real-life drug survival data on secukinumab in HS. The findings suggest the need for further research into more effective biologics for HS. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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28. Predicting discontinuation of biologic therapy caused by adverse events in psoriasis patients—A Danish nationwide cohort study.
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Nielsen, Mia‐Louise, Petersen, Troels C., Maul, Julia‐Tatjana, Wu, Jashin J., Bertelsen, Trine, Skov, Lone, Thomsen, Simon F., Thyssen, Jacob P., and Egeberg, Alexander
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- 2023
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29. Mapping the road to biologics in psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis: A nationwide drug utilization study.
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Thein, David, Rosenø, Nana A. L., Nielsen, Mia‐Louise, Kristensen, Lars Erik, Maul, Julia‐Tatjana, Wu, Jashin J., Thomsen, Simon Francis, Thyssen, Jacob P., and Egeberg, Alexander
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- 2023
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30. No impact of disease duration on response to tildrakizumab treatment among patients with moderate‐to‐severe plaque psoriasis: Post hoc analyses from two phase 3 (reSURFACE 1 and reSURFACE 2) and one phase 4 (TRIBUTE) studies.
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Griss, Johannes, Ratzinger, Gudrun, Maul, Julia‐Tatjana, Weger, Wolfgang, Thaçi, Diamant, Carrascosa, José Manuel, and Jonak, Constanze
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- 2023
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31. Effectiveness of Biologics, Patient-Reported Outcomes, and Clinical Photography in a Subset of Patients with Moderate-to-Severe Psoriasis: Week 12 Results from the Psoriasis Study of Health Outcomes (PSoHO).
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Travaglini, Massimo, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Kors, Christian, Zaheri, Shirin, Gerwien, Jens, Müller, Michaela, Brnabic, Alan, Sabatino, Silvia, Schuster, Christopher, and Tsai, Tsen-Fang
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PATIENT reported outcome measures ,BIOLOGICALS ,PSORIASIS ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,QUALITY of life - Abstract
Purpose: Since skin is highly accessible, clinical photography is a useful tool to visually substantiate the real-world effectiveness outcomes of biologic-treated adults with moderate-to-severe psoriasis (PsO). We report the effectiveness and patient-reported outcomes at Week 12 between anti-interleukin (IL)-17A biologics and other biologics as well as ixekizumab and guselkumab in patients with available clinical photography at baseline and Week 12.Patients and Methods: The Psoriasis Study of Health Outcomes (PSoHO) is an international, non-interventional, cohort study investigating the effectiveness of biologics in adults with moderate-to-severe psoriasis at Week 12. Outcomes included the proportion of patients who achieved 90% improvement in Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI90) and/or static Physician Global Assessment (sPGA) 0/1 (primary endpoint), PASI100, PASI90, Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI), and Itch Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) (secondary endpoints) at Week 12. Data are reported descriptively.Results: This analysis included 59 biologic-treated (23 anti-IL-17A; 36 other biologics) patients with available clinical photographs from the overall PSoHO study (n=1981). At baseline, the mean (standard deviation [SD]) age was 45.7 (11.1) years, 71.2% were male, 52.5% were bio-experienced and the median (interquartile range) duration of disease was 10.5 (12.4) years. Mean (SD) PASI was 16.9 (9.3) and sPGA was 3.5 (0.8). At Week 12, 65.2%/47.2% of the anti-IL-17A/other biologics cohort achieved the primary outcome. Response rates for PASI90/100 were numerically higher with anti-IL-17A than with other biologics. Patients receiving anti-IL-17A had numerically better outcomes for DLQI 0/1 and Itch NRS than those receiving other biologics at Week 12. Clinical photographs confirmed skin improvements in ixekizumab- and guselkumab-treated patients.Conclusion: This subgroup analysis showed that anti-IL-17A biologics are effective at rapidly improving signs and symptoms of PsO and improving quality of life. Additionally, serial photography provided visual evidence of biologic treatment response over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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32. S2k guideline diagnosis, prevention, and therapy of hand eczema.
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Bauer, Andrea, Brans, Richard, Brehler, Randolf, Büttner, Marion, Dickel, Heinrich, Elsner, Peter, Fartasch, Manigé, Herzog, Claudia, John, Swen‐Malte, Köllner, Arno, Maul, Julia‐Tatjana, Merk, Hans, Molin, Sonja, Nast, Alexander, Nikolakis, Georgios D., Schliemann, Sybille, Skudlik, Christoph, Weisshaar, Elke, Werfel, Thomas, and Zidane, Miriam
- Abstract
Summary: The consensus‐based guideline "Diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of hand eczema (HE)" provides concrete instructions and recommendations for diagnosis, prevention, and therapy of HE based on an evidence‐ and consensus‐based approach. The guideline was created based on the German guideline "Management von Handekzemen" from 2009 and the current guideline of the European Society of Contact Dermatitis (ESCD) "Guidelines for diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of hand eczema" from 2022. The general goal of the guideline is to provide dermatologists and allergologists in practice and clinics with an accepted, evidence‐based decision‐making tool for selecting and conducting suitable and sufficient therapy for patients with hand eczema. The guideline is based on two Cochrane reviews of therapeutic and preventive interventions for HE. The remaining chapters were mainly developed and consented based on non‐systematic literature research by the expert group. The expert group consisted of members of allergological and occupational dermatological professional associations and working groups, a patient representative, and methodologists. The proposals for recommendations and key statements were consented by using a nominal group process during a consensus conference on September 15, 2022. The structured consensus‐building process was professionally moderated. This guideline is valid until February 22, 2028. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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33. S2k‐Leitlinie Diagnostik, Prävention und Therapie des Handekzems: S2k guideline diagnosis, prevention and therapy of hand eczema.
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Bauer, Andrea, Brans, Richard, Brehler, Randolf, Büttner, Marion, Dickel, Heinrich, Elsner, Peter, Fartasch, Manigé, Herzog, Claudia, John, Swen‐Malte, Köllner, Arno, Maul, Julia‐Tatjana, Merk, Hans, Molin, Sonja, Nast, Alexander, Nikolakis, Georgios D., Schliemann, Sybille, Skudlik, Christoph, Weisshaar, Elke, Werfel, Thomas, and Zidane, Miriam
- Abstract
Copyright of Journal der Deutschen Dermatologischen Gesellschaft is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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34. The Association Between Fatigue and Adult Atopic Dermatitis: A Cross-Sectional Study.
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Thyssen, Jacob P., Nymand, Lea K., Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Schmid-Grendelmeier, Peter, Wu, Jashin J., Frøstrup, Anne Grete, Gren, Susanne Thiesen, Thomsen, Simon Francis, and Egeberg, Alexander
- Abstract
Background: There is currently limited insight into the broader impact of atopic dermatitis (AD) on mental health. Although studies indicate that AD patients may experience fatigue, no study has so far examined fatigue in more granular detail, for example, occurrence of general fatigue, physical fatigue, reduced activity, reduced motivation, and mental fatigue, or correlated fatigue measures with AD severity and symptoms intensity. Objectives: To examine fatigue subtypes and their prevalence in adults with AD, as well as their possible association with AD severity. Methods: A survey was conducted in adults with AD who had been managed in a hospital setting. The Patient-Oriented SCORing Atopic Dermatitis was used to determine AD severity. Patient reported outcomes, including multidimensional fatigue inventory, were included. Results: Data from 2729 adults with AD were analyzed. The total and individual fatigue scores increased consistently with lower socioeconomic scores, higher AD severity, Dermatology Life Quality Index, itch, pain, and sleep scores. Increased fatigue scores were associated with AD severity in adjusted analyses. Conclusions: Among adults with AD, fatigue scores increased with disease severity as well as intensity of AD symptoms. Fatigue is a hitherto underappreciated symptom of AD that clinicians should be cognizant about. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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35. Attitudes towards COVID Vaccine and Vaccine Hesitancy in Dermatology: A Narrative Review.
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Tay, Woo Chiao, Bewley, Anthony, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, and Oon, Hazel H.
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HEALTH attitudes ,VACCINE hesitancy ,BOOSTER vaccines ,MEDICAL personnel ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Vaccine hesitancy has been a contentious issue even before the pandemic. The COVID-19 crisis has further amplified vaccine hesitancy, with worries about adverse effects, cultural and religious beliefs, and misinformation on social media. In dermatology, patients with pre-existing skin conditions may have specific concerns about the impact of the vaccine on their skin health. Factors such as cutaneous reactions, potential flares of underlying conditions, and fears of psoriasis worsening post-vaccination contribute to vaccine hesitancy. Healthcare professionals, including dermatologists, play a crucial role in addressing vaccine hesitancy by providing accurate information, addressing concerns, and understanding the psychological impact on patients. The concept of vaccine fatigue is also explored, noting the challenges in sustaining vaccine acceptance over time, especially with regards to booster vaccinations. Overcoming vaccine hesitancy requires trust-building, effective communication strategies, and collaboration between healthcare workers and non-healthcare individuals to combat misinformation. By recognizing and addressing psychological factors, dermatologists can increase vaccine acceptance and improve public health efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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36. Efficacious and save use of biosimilar filgrastim for hematopoietic progenitor cell chemo‐mobilization with vinorelbine in multiple myeloma patients
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Maul, Julia‐Tatjana, Stenner‐Liewen, Frank, Seifert, Burkhardt, Pfrommer, Sarah, Petrausch, Ulf, Kiessling, Michael K., Schanz, Urs, Nair, Gayathri, Mischo, Axel, Taverna, Christian, Schmidt, Adrian, Bargetzi, Mario, Stupp, Roger, Renner, Christoph, and Samaras, Panagiotis
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- 2017
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37. Association Between Psoriasis and Obesity Among US Adults in the 2009-2014 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.
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Smith, Brandon, Devjani, Shivali, Collier, Michael R., Maul, Julia-Tatjana, and Wu, Jashin J.
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HEALTH & Nutrition Examination Survey ,PSORIASIS ,OBESITY - Abstract
The article focuses on investigating the association between psoriasis and obesity using the 2009-2014 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey data. The topics include the relationship between psoriasis and various factors such as body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, and being called overweight by a health care provider, revealing significant associations between psoriasis and certain indicators of being overweight or obese.
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- 2023
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38. Educational level-dependent melanoma awareness in a highrisk population in Switzerland.
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Mueller, Alina Miriam, Goessinger, Elisabeth Victoria, Cerminara, Sara Elisa, Kostner, Lisa, Amaral, Margarida, Huber, Stephanie Marie, Passweg, Lea Pauline, Moreno, Laura Garcia, Bodenmann, Daniel, Kunz, Michael, Levesque, Mitchell Paul, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Cheng, Phil Fang, Navarini, Alexander Andreas, and Maul, Lara Valeska
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DYSPLASTIC nevus syndrome ,MELANOMA ,SUNSHINE ,SKIN cancer ,PATIENT education ,BRAF genes - Abstract
Introduction: The worldwide incidence of melanoma has been increasing rapidly in recent decades with Switzerland having one of the highest rates in Europe. Ultraviolet (UV) radiation is one of the main risk factors for skin cancer. Our objective was to investigate UV protective behavior and melanoma awareness in a high-risk cohort for melanoma. Methods: In this prospective monocentric study, we assessed general melanoma awareness and UV protection habits in at-risk patients (≥100 nevi, ≥5 dysplastic nevi, known CDKN2A mutation, and/or positive family history) and melanoma patients using questionnaires. Results: Between 01/2021 and 03/ 2022, a total of 269 patients (53.5% at-risk patients, 46.5% melanoma patients) were included. We observed a significant trend toward using a higher sun protection factor (SPF) in melanoma patients compared with at-risk patients (SPF 50+: 48% [n=60] vs. 26% [n=37]; p=0.0016). Those with a college or university degree used a high SPF significantly more often than patients with lower education levels (p=0.0007).However, higher educational levels correlated with increased annual sun exposure (p=0.041). Neither a positive family history for melanoma, nor gender or Fitzpatrick skin type influenced sun protection behavior. An age of ≥ 50 years presented as a significant risk factor for melanoma development with an odd’s ratio of 2.32. Study participation resulted in improved sun protection behavior with 51% reporting more frequent sunscreen use after study inclusion. Discussion: UV protection remains a critical factor in melanoma prevention. We suggest that melanoma awareness should continue to be raised through public skin cancer prevention campaigns with a particular focus on individuals with low levels of education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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39. Cutaneous lichenoid drug eruptions: A narrative review evaluating demographics, clinical features and culprit medications.
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Maul, Julia‐Tatjana, Guillet, Carole, Oschmann, Anna, Maul, Lara Valeska, Meier‐Schiesser, Barbara, Stadler, Pia‐Charlotte, French, Lars E., and Kerl, Katrin
- Subjects
- *
DRUG eruptions , *DRUG side effects , *TOXIC epidermal necrolysis , *PROTEIN-tyrosine kinase inhibitors , *LICHEN planus , *DRUGS - Abstract
Cutaneous lichenoid drug eruptions (LDE) are adverse drug reactions (ADR) characterized by symmetric, erythematous, violaceous papules reminiscent but rarely fully characteristic of lichen planus (LP). We aimed to analyse the literature describing cases of LDE within the last 20 years to provide additional insight into culprit drugs, typical latency to onset of the eruption, the spectrum of clinical presentations, severity and management. A literature search was conducted in MEDLINE between January 2000 and 27 January 2021. The keywords 'lichenoid drug rash' and 'lichenoid drug eruption' were used. Cases were included if LDE diagnosis was made, and culprit drugs were identified. A total of 323 cases with LDE were identified from 163 published case reports and studies. The mean patient age was 58.5 years (1 month to 92 years), and 135 patients (41.8%) were female. Checkpoint inhibitors (CKI) were the most frequently reported culprit drugs (136 cases; 42.1%), followed by tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) (39 cases; 12.0%) and anti‐TNF‐α‐monoclonal antibodies (13 cases; 4.0%). The latency between initiation of the drug and manifestation was 15.7 weeks (range: 0.1–208 weeks). After discontinuing the culprit drug, the median time to resolution was 14.2 weeks (range: 0.71–416 weeks). One hundred thirty‐six patients (42.1%) were treated with topical, and 54 patients (16.7%) with systemic glucocorticoids. Overall, we conclude that, albeit rare, LDE is challenging to diagnose ADR induced by mostly CKI, TKI, and biologics. Treatment modalities resemble that of lichen planus, and the culprit drugs had to be discontinued in only 26%, which is low compared with other types of adverse drug reactions. This is probably due to the low risk of aggravation (e.g. toxic epidermal necrolysis) if the drug is continued and the benefit/risk ratio favouring the drug, as is often the case in cancer therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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40. Acute Generalized Exanthematous Pustulosis: Clinical Characteristics, Pathogenesis, and Management.
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Stadler, Pia-Charlotte, Oschmann, Anna, Kerl-French, Katrin, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Oppel, Eva Maria, Meier-Schiesser, Barbara, and French, Lars Einar
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DRUG eruptions ,DRUG side effects ,LYMPHOCYTE transformation ,SYMPTOMS ,LUPUS nephritis ,BONE marrow - Abstract
Background: Acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis (AGEP) is a potentially severe adverse cutaneous drug reaction, which typically occurs within 24–48 h after the intake of the culprit drug. Summary: AGEP is characterized by numerous sterile subcorneal pustules on erythematous skin and in less than a third of cases it can be associated with organ manifestations possibly leading to life-threatening symptoms (e.g., cholestasis, nephritis, and lung and bone marrow involvement). In contrast to generalized pustular psoriasis, it can involve mucosal regions and typically resolves rapidly if the culprit drug is removed, and adequate therapy with topical or systemic steroids administered. Diagnosis based on patient history, clinical signs, and characteristic cutaneous histology is rarely challenging. Identification of the culprit drug may be aided by patch testing or lymphocyte transformation tests that are of limited value. Key Messages: Recent experimental data reviewed herein are supportive of an early role of drug-induced innate immune activation and innate cytokines such as interleukin (IL)-1, IL-36, and IL-17 in the pathogenesis of AGEP. This explains the rapid onset and neutrophilic character of the cutaneous inflammation, but also provides new avenues for in vitro tests aimed at better identifying the culprit drug. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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41. Prevalence of ichthyoses in Denmark: a nationwide registry-based study.
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Thein, David, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Schmid-Grendelmeier, Peter, Thyssen, Jacob P, and Egeberg, Alexander
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- *
ICHTHYOSIS , *NEONATAL intensive care , *NOSOLOGY - Abstract
A study published in the British Journal of Dermatology provides insight into the prevalence of ichthyoses in Denmark. Ichthyosis is a group of genetic skin disorders characterized by dry and scaly skin. The study found that the prevalence of ichthyoses in Denmark is 1.6 per 10,000 people, with ichthyosis vulgaris being the most common type. The prevalence varied by age and sex, with higher rates in younger age groups and a higher prevalence in women over 50 years old. However, the study may underestimate the true prevalence and further research is needed. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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42. Access to psoriasis treatment in Brazil and Chile: A cross-sectional multicentre Global Healthcare Study on Psoriasis.
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Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Fröhlich, Fabienne, Maul, Lara Valeska, Stunnenberg, Rieka, Valenzuela, Fernando, Cruz, Claudia De La, Vera-Kellet, Cristián, Armijo, Daniela, Cesar, Wagner G, Carvalho, Andre, Didaskalu, Johannes Alexander, Graf, Nicole, Egeberg, Alexander, Wu, Jashin J, Thyssen, Jacob P, Romiti, Ricardo, and Griffiths, Christopher E M
- Subjects
- *
PSORIASIS , *BODY surface area , *FISHER exact test , *CHILEANS , *BIOTHERAPY - Abstract
Background Sufficient data on access to systemic treatment for patients with psoriasis living in Latin America (LA) including Brazil and Chile are lacking. Understanding the availability and limiting factors of access to treatments can help to improve patient care and decrease long-term healthcare costs. Objectives In association with the Global Psoriasis Atlas, this cross-sectional survey study analysed the availability and insurance reimbursement of systemic treatments for adult patients with psoriasis in Brazil and Chile. Methods A multicentre, cross-sectional Global Healthcare Study on Psoriasis was performed in Brazil and Chile in 2020. For each eligible adult patient with psoriasis, doctors and nurses completed a 48-item questionnaire about clinical aspects of psoriasis including the Psoriasis Area Severity Index (PASI), body surface area (BSA) score and the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI), as well as the availability of systemic treatments and insurance reimbursement status. Between-country differences were compared with Wilcoxon rank sum tests for continuous variables, and a χ2-test or Fisher's exact test, where appropriate, for categorical variables. The median and interquartile range (IQR) was calculated for non-normal distributed data. Results A total of 1424 patients with psoriasis from 43 centres [27 centres in Brazil (n = 826) and 16 in Chile (n = 598)], were included with a mean (SD) age of 49.1 (16.3) and 49.2 (15.1) years, respectively. Unstratified analyses revealed that patients with psoriasis in Chile had more severe disease than those in Brazil [PASI 11.6 vs. 8.4 (P < 0.001) and BSA 14.7 vs. 12.0 (P = 0.003), respectively]. For patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis, defined as PASI and/or BSA ≥ 10, systemic nonbiologic drugs were available (81.2% in Brazil and 65.3% in Chile, P ≤ 0.001), but only 37.0% of patients in Brazil and 27.3% in Chile received biologics (P = 0.01). Lack of availability and/or lack of insurance reimbursement for biologic drugs for patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis was reported for 22.2% (50 of 225) in Brazil and 67.9% (148 of 218) in Chile (P < 0.001). Patients with no access to biologic therapies due to lack of availability/insurance reimbursement had a median PASI of 9.15 (IQR 3.00–14.25) in Brazil and 12.0 (IQR 5.00–19.00) in Chile (P = 0.007), as well as a median BSA of 7.0 (IQR 3.00–15.00) and 12.0 (IQR 5.00–22.50) (P = 0.002), and median DLQI of 11.0 (6.00–15.00) and 21.0 (6.50–25.00) (P = 0.007), respectively. Conclusions Chilean patients had significantly more severe psoriasis compared with Brazilian patients in our study. While nonbiologic treatments for moderate-to-severe psoriasis were available in both LA countries, there is a high need for improvement in access to more effective psoriasis treatments including biologics. Our results highlight a significant gap between treatment recommendations in international psoriasis guidelines and real-world situations in Brazil and Chile. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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43. Objective hand eczema severity assessment with automated lesion anatomical stratification.
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Amruthalingam, Ludovic, Mang, Nora, Gottfrois, Philippe, Gonzalez Jimenez, Alvaro, Maul, Julia‐Tatjana, Kunz, Michael, Pouly, Marc, and Navarini, Alexander A.
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ECZEMA ,DEEP learning ,INTRACLASS correlation ,SEVERITY of illness index ,SKIN diseases - Abstract
Hand eczema (HE) is one of the most frequent dermatoses, known to be both relapsing and remitting. Regular and precise evaluation of the disease severity is key for treatment management. Current scoring systems such as the hand eczema severity index (HECSI) suffer from intra‐ and inter‐observer variance. We propose an automated system based on deep learning models (DLM) to quantify HE lesions' surface and determine their anatomical stratification. In this retrospective study, a team of 11 experienced dermatologists annotated eczema lesions in 312 HE pictures, and a medical student created anatomical maps of 215 hands pictures based on 37 anatomical subregions. Each data set was split into training and test pictures and used to train and evaluate two DLMs, one for anatomical mapping, the other for HE lesions segmentation. On the respective test sets, the anatomy DLM achieved average precision and sensitivity of 83% (95% confidence interval [CI] 80–85) and 85% (CI 82–88), while the HE DLM achieved precision and sensitivity of 75% (CI 64–82) and 69% (CI 55–81). The intraclass correlation of the predicted HE surface with dermatologists' estimated surface was 0.94 (CI 0.90–0.96). The proposed method automatically predicts the anatomical stratification of HE lesions' surface and can serve as support to evaluate hand eczema severity, improving reliability, precision and efficiency over manual assessment. Furthermore, the anatomical DLM is not limited to HE and can be applied to any other skin disease occurring on the hands such as lentigo or psoriasis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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44. Acceptance of Telemedicine Compared to In-Person Consultation From the Providers' and Users' Perspectives: Multicenter, Cross-Sectional Study in Dermatology.
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Maul, Lara Valeska, Jahn, Anna Sophie, Pamplona, Gustavo S. P., Streit, Markus, Gantenbein, Lorena, Müller, Simon, Nielsen, Mia-Louise, Greis, Christian, Navarini, Alexander A., and Maul, Julia-Tatjana
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- 2023
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45. Improved diagnosis by automated macro‐ and micro‐anatomical region mapping of skin photographs.
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Amruthalingam, L., Gottfrois, P., Gonzalez Jimenez, A., Gökduman, B., Kunz, M., Koller, T., Pouly, M., Navarini, A.A., Maul, Julia‐Tatjana, Maul, Lara V., Kostner, Lisa, Jamiolkowski, Dagmar, Erni, Barbara, Hsu, Christophe, Meienberger, Nina, Nicolas Khouri, M., Christiane Palm, M., Damian Wuethrich, M., Anliker, Madeleine, and Manabu Rohr, M.
- Subjects
DEEP learning ,IMAGE retrieval ,PHOTOGRAPHS ,INDEPENDENT sets ,DIFFERENTIAL diagnosis - Abstract
Background: The exact location of skin lesions is key in clinical dermatology. On one hand, it supports differential diagnosis (DD) since most skin conditions have specific predilection sites. On the other hand, location matters for dermatosurgical interventions. In practice, lesion evaluation is not well standardized and anatomical descriptions vary or lack altogether. Automated determination of anatomical location could benefit both situations. Objective: Establish an automated method to determine anatomical regions in clinical patient pictures and evaluate the gain in DD performance of a deep learning model (DLM) when trained with lesion locations and images. Methods: Retrospective study based on three datasets: macro‐anatomy for the main body regions with 6000 patient pictures partially labelled by a student, micro‐anatomy for the ear region with 182 pictures labelled by a student and DD with 3347 pictures of 16 diseases determined by dermatologists in clinical settings. For each dataset, a DLM was trained and evaluated on an independent test set. The primary outcome measures were the precision and sensitivity with 95% CI. For DD, we compared the performance of a DLM trained with lesion pictures only with a DLM trained with both pictures and locations. Results: The average precision and sensitivity were 85% (CI 84–86), 84% (CI 83–85) for macro‐anatomy, 81% (CI 80–83), 80% (CI 77–83) for micro‐anatomy and 82% (CI 78–85), 81% (CI 77–84) for DD. We observed an improvement in DD performance of 6% (McNemar test P‐value 0.0009) for both average precision and sensitivity when training with both lesion pictures and locations. Conclusion: Including location can be beneficial for DD DLM performance. The proposed method can generate body region maps from patient pictures and even reach surgery relevant anatomical precision, e.g. the ear region. Our method enables automated search of large clinical databases and make targeted anatomical image retrieval possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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46. Comorbidities in Chilean patients with psoriasis: a Global Healthcare Study on Psoriasis.
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Valenzuela, Fernando, De La Cruz, Claudia, Lecaros, Cristóbal, Fernández, Javier, Hevia, Gonzalo, Maul, Lara Valeska, Thyssen, Jacob P., Vera‐Kellet, Cristián, Egeberg, Alexander, Armijo, Daniela, Pizarro, Cristian, Riveros, Tatiana, Correa, Hernán, Guglielmetti, Antonio, Didaskalu, Johannes A., Wu, Jashin J., Griffiths, Christopher E. M., Romiti, Ricardo, and Maul, Julia‐Tatjana
- Subjects
CHILEANS ,NON-alcoholic fatty liver disease ,PSORIASIS ,PSORIATIC arthritis ,DISEASE risk factors ,TYPE 2 diabetes - Abstract
Background: Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease associated with several important medical comorbidities. There are scant data available on the comorbidities of patients with psoriasis in South America. Aim: To examine the comorbidity profile of adult patients with psoriasis in Chile and its association with severity of psoriasis. Methods: This was a multicentre, cross‐sectional study involving 16 hospitals and clinics in Chile, which used a 48‐item questionnaire to study clinician‐ and patient‐reported outcomes and comorbidities. Inferential analyses were performed by psoriasis severity, using Fisher exact test, Student t‐test and multivariable logistic regression. Results: In total, 598 adult patients with psoriasis were included (51.1% male; mean age 49.2 ± 15.1 years); 48.5% mild and 51.4% moderate to severe; Psoriasis Area and Severity Index 11.6 ± 11.5; body surface area 14.7 ± 18.2%. Plaque psoriasis was the most common phenotype (90.2%), followed by guttate (13.4%). Psoriatic arthritis occurred in 27.3% of patients. Comorbidities were reported in 60.2% of all patients with psoriasis. Frequent concomitant diseases were obesity (25.3%), hypertension (24.3%), Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) (18.7%), dyslipidaemia (17.4%), metabolic syndrome (16.7%) and depression (14.4%). After adjustment, significant associations were found between moderate to severe psoriasis and obesity, T2DM and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) compared with mild psoriasis. Conclusions: We report a large study of comorbidities, including depression, dyslipidaemia, T2DM and NAFLD, in people with psoriasis in Chile. The prevalence of comorbidities with psoriasis in Chile appears similar to that found in Western countries, and emphasizes the importance of assessing patients with psoriasis for risk factors for and presence of, comorbid disease in a multidisciplinary setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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47. Multivariable Predictive Models to Identify the Optimal Biologic Therapy for Treatment of Patients With Psoriasis at the Individual Level.
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Nielsen, Mia-Louise, Petersen, Troels Christian, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Wu, Jashin J., Rasmussen, Mads Kirchheiner, Bertelsen, Trine, Ajgeiy, Kawa Khaled, Skov, Lone, Thomsen, Simon Francis, Thyssen, Jacob P., and Egeberg, Alexander
- Published
- 2022
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48. The road to biologics in patients with hidradenitis suppurativa: a nationwide drug utilization study*.
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Ring, Hans Christian, Yao, Yiqiu, Maul, Julia‐Tatjana, Ingram, John R., Frew, John W., Thorsen, Jonathan, Nielsen, Mia‐Louise, Wu, Jashin J., Thyssen, Jacob P., Thomsen, Simon F., and Egeberg, Alexander
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DRUG utilization ,BIOTHERAPY ,BIOLOGICALS ,MEDICAL registries ,TREATMENT duration ,HIDRADENITIS suppurativa - Abstract
SUMMARY: Background: Prolonged systemic antibiotic treatment is often a part of management of hidradenitis suppurativa (HS). Although biologic therapies are now available, the patient's treatment journey leading to biologic therapy is unclear. Objectives: To examine treatment patterns and duration of systemic treatment use in patients with HS preceding biologic therapy. Methods: We identified all patients with HS receiving treatment with biologics in the Danish National Patient Registry from 2010 to 2018 and extracted their entire prescription history of specific systemic treatments from the Danish National Prescription Registry since its inception in 1995. The patients' treatment journeys are graphically displayed through Sankey diagrams and box plots generated to show temporal distributions. Descriptive patient characteristics were presented as frequencies with percentages for categorical variables and as means with SDs or medians with interquartile ranges (IQRs) for continuous variables. Results: A total of 225 patients with HS were included. Patients had most frequently been treated with penicillin (n = 214; 95·1%), dicloxacillin (n = 194; 86·2%), tetracycline (n = 145; 64·4%) and rifampicin/clindamycin (n = 111; 49·3%), as well as the retinoids isotretinoin and acitretin, and dapsone. Prior to biologic therapy, patients received a mean of 4·0 (SD 1·3) different systemic therapies, across a mean of 16·9 (SD 11·3) different treatment series. The mean time from first systemic therapy until biologic therapy was initiated was 15·3 (SD 5·1) years [8·2 (SD 5·9) years when excluding penicillin and dicloxacillin]. Conclusions: Patients with HS who receive biologic therapy have long preceding treatment histories with multiple drug classes and treatment series, many of which are supported by relatively weak evidence in HS. Delay in the initiation of biologic therapy may represent a missed opportunity to prevent disease progression. What is already known about this topic?The treatment journey leading to biologic therapy in patients with HS has not previously been investigated. What does this study add?Our data from 225 patients with HS illustrate that patients who receive biologic therapy have long preceding treatment histories with multiple drug classes and treatment series, many of which are supported by relatively weak evidence in HS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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49. Clinical Presentation and Prognostic Features in Patients with Immunotherapy-Induced Vitiligo-like Depigmentation: A Monocentric Prospective Observational Study.
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Hermann, Nicola, Maul, Lara Valeska, Ameri, Milad, Traidl, Stephan, Ziadlou, Reihane, Papageorgiou, Karolina, Kolm, Isabel, Levesque, Mitchell, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, and Brüggen, Marie-Charlotte
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MELANOMA treatment ,DISEASE progression ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,TUMOR classification ,HYPOPIGMENTATION ,T-test (Statistics) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,KAPLAN-Meier estimator ,DATA analysis software ,IMMUNOTHERAPY ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Simple Summary: In this study, we thoroughly explore the clinical and biological features of immunotherapy-induced vitiligo-like depigmentation (VLD) in patients with stage III-IV melanoma receiving immunotherapy. Key findings include a distinct immune signature with an upregulation of ITGA in the VLD group, an upregulation of EDAR and downregulation of LAG3 in VLD-responders group, a longer time to VLD onset in patients pre-treated with targeted therapy, the distribution of VLD lesions primarily in sun-exposed areas as opposed to mechanically stressed areas in non-immunotherapy-related vitiligo, the predominance of a symmetrical, small-freckle lesional pattern and a prolonged progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) in VLD patients without LDH elevation as opposed to those with LDH elevation. Vitiligo-like depigmentation (VLD) is an immune-related adverse event (irAE) of checkpoint-inhibitor (CPI) treatment, which has previously been associated with a favourable outcome. The aim of this study was to explore clinical, biological and prognostic features of melanoma patients with VLD under CPI-treatment and to explore whether they exhibit a characteristic immune response profile in peripheral blood. Melanoma patients developing VLD under CPI were included in a prospective observational single-center cohort study. We collected and analysed clinical parameters, photographs and serum from 28 VLD patients. They received pembrolizumab (36%), nivolumab (11%), ipilimumab/nivolumab (32%) or clinical trial medications (21%). We performed a high-throughput proteomics assay (Olink), in which we identified a distinct proteomic signature in VLD patients in comparison to non-VLD CPI patients. Our clinical assessments revealed that VLD lesions had a predominantly symmetrical distribution pattern, with mostly smaller "freckle-like" macules and a preferential distribution in UV-exposed areas. Patients with previous targeted therapy showed a significantly longer time lapse between CPI initiation and VLD onset compared to non-pre-treated patients (12.5 vs. 6.25 months). Therapy responders exhibited a distinct proteomic profile when compared with non-responders in VLD such as upregulation of EDAR and downregulation of LAG3. ITGA11 was elevated in the VLD-group when compared to non-VLD-CPI-treated melanoma patients. Our findings demonstrate that on a proteomic level, VLD is characterized by a distinct immune signature when compared to CPI-treated patients without VLD and that therapy responsiveness is reflected by a characteristic immune profile. The pathomechanisms underlying these findings and how they could relate to the antitumoral response in melanoma remain to be elucidated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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50. Over-Detection of Melanoma-Suspect Lesions by a CE-Certified Smartphone App: Performance in Comparison to Dermatologists, 2D and 3D Convolutional Neural Networks in a Prospective Data Set of 1204 Pigmented Skin Lesions Involving Patients' Perception.
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Jahn, Anna Sophie, Navarini, Alexander Andreas, Cerminara, Sara Elisa, Kostner, Lisa, Huber, Stephanie Marie, Kunz, Michael, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Dummer, Reinhard, Sommer, Seraina, Neuner, Anja Dominique, Levesque, Mitchell Paul, Cheng, Phil Fang, and Maul, Lara Valeska
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MELANOMA diagnosis ,DERMATOLOGISTS ,MOBILE apps ,MELANOMA ,EARLY detection of cancer ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,SKIN tumors ,RISK assessment ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ALGORITHMS ,TELEMEDICINE ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Simple Summary: Early detection and resection of cutaneous melanoma are crucial for a good prognosis. However, visual distinction of early melanomas from benign nevi remains challenging. New artificial intelligence-based approaches for risk stratification of pigmented skin lesions provide screening methods for laypersons with increasing use of smartphone applications (apps). Our study aims to prospectively investigate the diagnostic accuracy of a CE-certified smartphone app, SkinVision
® , in melanoma recognition. Based on classification into three different risk scores, the app provides a recommendation to consult a dermatologist. In addition, both patients' and dermatologists' perspectives towards AI-based mobile health apps were evaluated. We observed that the app classified a significantly higher number of lesions as high-risk than dermatologists, which would have led to a clinically harmful number of unnecessary excisions. The diagnostic performance of the app in dichotomous classification of 1204 pigmented skin lesions (risk classification for nevus vs. melanoma) remained below advertised rates with low sensitivity (41.3–83.3%) and specificity (60.0–82.9%). The confidence in the app was low among both patients and dermatologists, and no patient favored an assessment by the app alone. Although smartphone apps are a potential medium for increasing awareness of melanoma screening in the lay population, they should be evaluated for certification with prospective real-world evidence. The exponential increase in algorithm-based mobile health (mHealth) applications (apps) for melanoma screening is a reaction to a growing market. However, the performance of available apps remains to be investigated. In this prospective study, we investigated the diagnostic accuracy of a class 1 CE-certified smartphone app in melanoma risk stratification and its patient and dermatologist satisfaction. Pigmented skin lesions ≥ 3 mm and any suspicious smaller lesions were assessed by the smartphone app SkinVision® (SkinVision® B.V., Amsterdam, the Netherlands, App-Version 6.8.1), 2D FotoFinder ATBM® master (FotoFinder ATBM® Systems GmbH, Bad Birnbach, Germany, Version 3.3.1.0), 3D Vectra® WB360 (Canfield Scientific, Parsippany, NJ, USA, Version 4.7.1) total body photography (TBP) devices, and dermatologists. The high-risk score of the smartphone app was compared with the two gold standards: histological diagnosis, or if not available, the combination of dermatologists', 2D and 3D risk assessments. A total of 1204 lesions among 114 patients (mean age 59 years; 51% females (55 patients at high-risk for developing a melanoma, 59 melanoma patients)) were included. The smartphone app's sensitivity, specificity, and area under the receiver operating characteristics (AUROC) varied between 41.3–83.3%, 60.0–82.9%, and 0.62–0.72% according to two study-defined reference standards. Additionally, all patients and dermatologists completed a newly created questionnaire for preference and trust of screening type. The smartphone app was rated as trustworthy by 36% (20/55) of patients at high-risk for melanoma, 49% (29/59) of melanoma patients, and 8.8% (10/114) of dermatologists. Most of the patients rated the 2D TBP imaging (93% (51/55) resp. 88% (52/59)) and the 3D TBP imaging (91% (50/55) resp. 90% (53/59)) as trustworthy. A skin cancer screening by combination of dermatologist and smartphone app was favored by only 1.8% (1/55) resp. 3.4% (2/59) of the patients; no patient preferred an assessment by a smartphone app alone. The diagnostic accuracy in clinical practice was not as reliable as previously advertised and the satisfaction with smartphone apps for melanoma risk stratification was scarce. MHealth apps might be a potential medium to increase awareness for melanoma screening in the lay population, but healthcare professionals and users should be alerted to the potential harm of over-detection and poor performance. In conclusion, we suggest further robust evidence-based evaluation before including market-approved apps in self-examination for public health benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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