Abstract
Psoriasis is a life-disabling disorder in which 8-10% of patients aged 18-54 actively contemplate suicide because of their disease. Owing to the toxicity and=or inconvenience of current, FDA-approved treatments far moderate-to-severe psoriasis, they are generally used intermittently so that patients experience cycles of remission-flare-remission-flare, etc. The challenge to drug development for moderate-to-severe psoriasis is to provide safe and effective long-term management. Immunobiologics offer the hope for safe, long-term control of psoriasis because they lack targeted organ toxicity. Thus the treatment paradigm may shift from one of intermittent treatment limited by toxicity with resultant flares of disease, to one similar to that seen in diabetesor hypertension in which disease is controlled continuously.Additionally, immunobiologics may alter the natural history of psoriasis. Etanercept, which targets TNF-, controls signs and symptoms and halts joint destruction in patients with psoriatic arthritis. The long-lived remissions observed after cessation of alefacept or infliximab (anti-TNF-monoclonal antibody) treatment lead this author to speculate that these immunobiologics may actually alter the natural history of the cutaneous manifestations of psoriasis.