Psoriasis Risk With Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors

JAMA Dermatology

Clinical Summary

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What was studied

A nationwide target trial emulation using Taiwan insurance and cancer registry data compared new-onset psoriasis in stage III–IV cancer patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors versus chemotherapy or targeted therapies between January 1, 2019, and June 30, 2021.

Key findings

Among 135,230 patients (3,188 ICI; 132,042 non-ICI), psoriasis incidence was 5.76 vs 1.44 per 1,000 person-years; IPTW-adjusted HR was 3.31 and IPTW-adjusted subdistribution HR was 2.43, consistent across as-started/on-treatment designs and sensitivity analyses.

Clinical implications

Expect a higher rate of incident psoriasis with immune checkpoint inhibitors than with chemotherapy or targeted therapies; monitor and counsel patients starting ICIs about this risk.