Atopic eczema and psoriasis are chronic, inflammatory dermatoses that can significantly affect the quality of life of those affected. Although both diseases are common, they rarely occur together. Severe psoriasis can be treated with biologic therapies targeting specific cytokine pathways involved in disease pathogenesis. There are reports of paradoxical eczema developing in biologic-treated patients with psoriasis, sometimes necessitating treatment discontinuation and thus leading to poor disease control. This retrospective case series identified 36 such events occurring in 23 patients. All currently available biologic classes were implicated. Eosinophilia (n = 19) and elevated serum IgE (n = 3) were identified in some cases. Treatment strategies included no treatment, topical corticosteroids, broad-acting systemic agents, and discontinuation or switch of biologic therapy. Two patients had persistent eczema and psoriasis despite discontinuation of all biologic therapies.
Ali Al‐Janabi, Stephen Eyre, Amy Foulkes, Adnan R. Khan, Nick Dand, Ekaterina Burova, Bernadette DeSilva, Areti Makrygeorgou, Emily Davies, Catherine Smith, Christopher Em Griffiths, Andrew P. Morris, Richard B. Warren
Ali Al‐Janabi, Oras Alabas, Zenas Z N Yiu, Amy Foulkes, Stephen Eyre, Adnan R. Khan, Nick J. Reynolds, Catherine Smith, Christopher Em Griffiths, Richard B. Warren, Philip Laws, Shehnaz Ahmed, Juliet N. Barker, Anthoney Bewley, Ian Evans, Philip Hampton, Olivia Hughes, Brian Kirby, Elise Kleyn, Mark Lunt, Teena Mackenzie, Kathy McElhone, Tess McPherson, Simon Morrison, ,
Ali Al‐Janabi, Paul Martin, Adnan R. Khan, Amy Foulkes, Catherine Smith, Christopher Em Griffiths, Andrew P. Morris, Stephen Eyre, Richard B. Warren, Shehnaz Ahmed, Oras Alabas, Juliet N. Barker, G Becher, Anthony Bewley, Ian M. Evans, Philip Hampton, Brian Kirby, Elise Kleyn, Philip Laws, Linda Lawson, Teena Mackenzie, Kathleen McElhone, Tess McPherson,
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