Psoriasis can result in reduced quality of life, work productivity loss, and a significant restriction in non-professional activities. This study investigates the effects of long-term treatment with adalimumab regarding work ability, non-professional activities, and health-related quality of life in a large real-word population in Germany.
Patients and methods
Single-arm, multicenter non-interventional study to document routine care data for up to 5 years in adult patients with psoriasis after initiation of adalimumab.
Results
Baseline data was collected for 4,793 (62.1 % male) patients with a mean (± SD) age of 47.5 ± 13.11 years. The number of days with restrictions in non-professional activities was much higher than in professional activities. Under adalimumab, the psoriasis-related number of days unfit for work and number of days with restrictions in non-professional activities significantly decreased. Correlation analyses showed that psoriatic arthritis, disease severity (PASI > 10), and impairment of quality of life (DLQI > 10) are associated with restrictions in non-professional activities. Health-related quality of life improved over the observed time but remained reduced in patients with restrictions in non-professional activities.
Conclusions
Long-term treatment with adalimumab had a favorable impact on clinical outcomes, employment-related aspects, practice of non-professional activities, and health-related quality of life in psoriasis patients.