By Dr Irwin Lim, Rheumatologist
Tumor Necrosis Factor inhibitors (TNFi) have been used for more than a decade as effective treatment for a variety of inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease and psoriasis/psoriatic arthritis.
Paradoxically, some patients, even when their psoriatic arthritis manifestations improve (these include spinal pain, joint swelling, enthesitis and tendon inflammation), develop worsening psoriasis or new psoriasis-type skin lesions.
These psoriasis-type or psoriasiform lesions have been reported in patients with the range of different diseases treated with these TNFi agents. They've also occurred with the full range of different TNFi medications.
The most common lesions are plaque and palmopustular psoriasis but a small number of patients have also presented with guttate lesions.
You can appreciate that in the small minority who do develop these skin lesions that the management can be difficult, especially if the drug is working effectively to control whichever disease it was started for.
Management options include:
Have you experience paradoxical psoriasiform lesions on TNFi therapy?
How did you deal with it?
Dr Irwin Lim is a rheumatologist and a director of BJC Health. You should follow him on twitter here. Arthritis requires an integrated approach. We call this, Connected Care. Contact us.