Georgia Marquez-Grap, Dayna L Pham, Andrea Leung, Melissa C Leeolou, Allison Kranyak, Wilson Liao
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The Impact of Step Therapy on Individuals with Psoriatic Disease in the USA: Patient and Provider Perspectives.
The management of psoriatic disease has been revolutionized by biologic medications in recent years. Despite their efficacy and safety, patients are often required by insurance plans in the USA or national formulary guidelines in other countries to try and fail other treatments first, which is a strategy called step therapy. Originally designed to contain costs of specialty drugs, step therapy has a number of negative impacts on patients and providers, both personally and clinically. This article is coauthored by a patient with psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis who navigated step therapy. She describes her early experiences with psoriasis and achieving disease control with biologic medication, only to later be diagnosed with psoriatic arthritis and need to revise this treatment plan. She then explains how insurance denials and step therapy impact her life physically, emotionally, socially, and medically. This case is then discussed from the perspective of a dermatologist specializing in inflammatory skin disease. We highlight the psychosocial burden of psoriatic disease, as well as the burden of step therapy and its impacts on patients, providers, and the entire medical system.
期刊介绍:
Dermatology and Therapy is an international, open access, peer-reviewed, rapid publication journal (peer review in 2 weeks, published 3–4 weeks from acceptance). The journal is dedicated to the publication of high-quality clinical (all phases), observational, real-world, and health outcomes research around the discovery, development, and use of dermatological therapies. Studies relating to diagnosis, pharmacoeconomics, public health and epidemiology, quality of life, and patient care, management, and education are also encouraged.
Areas of focus include, but are not limited to all clinical aspects of dermatology, such as skin pharmacology; skin development and aging; prevention, diagnosis, and management of skin disorders and melanomas; research into dermal structures and pathology; and all areas of aesthetic dermatology, including skin maintenance, dermatological surgery, and lasers.
The journal is of interest to a broad audience of pharmaceutical and healthcare professionals and publishes original research, reviews, case reports/case series, trial protocols, and short communications. Dermatology and Therapy will consider all scientifically sound research be it positive, confirmatory or negative data. Submissions are welcomed whether they relate to an International and/or a country-specific audience, something that is crucially important when researchers are trying to target more specific patient populations. This inclusive approach allows the journal to assist in the dissemination of quality research, which may be considered of insufficient interest by other journals. The journal appeals to a global audience and receives submissions from all over the world.