Systemic Therapies for Psoriatic Disease and Serious Infections in Older Adults
Clinical Summary
View sourceWhat was studied
A population-based cohort of Ontario residents aged 66 years or older with psoriatic disease who started their first systemic therapy (2002–2020) and were followed to March 2021. Time on methotrexate, other older systemics, anti‑TNF biologics, other biologics (targeting IL‑12, IL‑23, IL‑17), and tofacitinib was compared with time off those drugs for risk of hospitalization for infection.
Key findings
Among 11,641 patients (53% female; median age 71), 1,967 serious infections occurred over a median 4.8 years. Infection rates per 100 person‑years were 2.7 (methotrexate), 2.5 (other older systemics), 2.2 (anti‑TNF), 1.4 (other biologics), and 8.9 (tofacitinib); adjusted RRs vs nonuse of each category were 0.95 (95% CI, 0.85–1.07), 0.92 (0.79–1.07), 0.87 (0.69–1.10), 0.65 (0.48–0.88), and 2.89 (1.14–7.34), respectively.
Study limitations
Comparators were person‑time not using each category, not direct head‑to‑head between classes. The ‘other biologics’ category grouped IL‑12, IL‑23, and IL‑17 agents, limiting drug‑specific inference.
Clinical implications
In older adults with psoriatic disease, IL‑12/23/17 biologics were associated with fewer serious infections, while tofacitinib was associated with more. When infection risk guides therapy choice, choosing these biologics over tofacitinib may help reduce hospitalizations.
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