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Editors
Psoriatic Arthritis
Essentials
- Psoriatic arthritis is a progressive, multiform, chronic, immunological, inflammatory disease of joints and the whole organ system that is often familial and may lead to destruction of joints.
- Starting treatment without delay may improve the patient's long term prognosis.
- Treatment aims at reducing the systemic inflammation and at eliminating both skin and joint symptoms.
- The patient should be motivated for treatment from the very beginning.
- The treatment of psoriatic arthritis depends on the extent of symptoms, radiological progression, and the activity of the dermatological disease.
- The treatment of psoriatic arthritis is based on methotrexate and good analgesia.
- Biological treatment can be used, as necessary.
- The risk of arterial disease, diabetes and potential depression associated with psoriatic arthritis should always be taken into account when planning the treatment.
Epidemiology
- The prevalence of cutaneous psoriasis among the European and North-American population is 1.5-3%. In an unselected population, the prevalence of psoriatic arthritis is 0.05-0.25%.
- At the onset of psoriasis, 2.4% of patients have psoriatic arthritis.
- The risk of psoriatic arthritis increases with increasing duration of psoriasis, and 5-7% of patients with psoriasis also have arthritis.
- In severe psoriasis, the risk of arthritis is 40-50%.
- Psoriatic arthritis may occur without skin symptoms.
- Psoriatic arthritis of small joints is equally common in men and women but the disease with spondylarthritis is more common in men.
- The incidence of psoriatic arthritis has increased during the last few decades.
- People with psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis have many associated disorders, such as cardiovascular disorders, diabetes, IBD and depression. Particular attention should be paid to their treatment.
History, symptoms and findings
- Susceptibility to the disease is determined by genetic factors.
- Psoriatic arthritis should be suspected if a patient with cutaneous psoriasis develops symptoms of arthritis and clinical findings consistent with psoriatic arthritis.
- However, cutaneous psoriasis does not exclude diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis Rheumatoid Arthritis.
Clinical findings typical for psoriatic arthritis
- Joint symptoms are multiform and often asymmetric.
- Painful joints and tenderness and inflammation of tendon insertions (enthesitis), such as inflammation in the heel bone at the insertion site of the Achilles tendon commonly occur.
- Asymmetric inflammation of a few joints is the most common manifestation.
- Polyarthritis
- May at first clinically resemble rheumatoid arthritis.
- Both rheumatoid factor (RF) and serum citrullinated peptide antibodies are usually negative.
- Inflammation of DIP joints (often PIP + DIP), often associated with typical nail changes ( ). It may be very painful.
- Dactylitis (sausage finger or toe)
- Asymmetric sacroiliitis and spondylitis are common in patients with spondylarthritis.
- Typically callus formation on bone surfaces, i.e. in the periosteum
- Polyarthritic disease eroding bone, and a form of disease causing swelling of the whole limb are rare.
- Uveitis can be seen in patients with psoriatic arthritis.
Diagnosis
- The diagnosis is clinical; there are no exact diagnostic criteria.
- The diagnostic criteria of the CASPAR working group can be used to define the disease. However, it should be remembered that they were made for use in research.
- Psoriatic arthritis cannot be diagnosed based on laboratory tests.
- Patients with psoriatic arthritis may have elevated plasma urate levels in the absence of gout.
- ESR and CRP may be either elevated or normal.
- Rheumatoid factor and anti-CCP antibodies may be exceptionally elevated.
- Changes possibly seen in X-ray can be used for diagnosis.
- Periosteal callus formation
- Bone erosion
- Complete fusion of joints
- 'Pencil-in-cup' changes in small phalangeal joints
- Unilateral sacroiliitis
- Asymmetric bulky syndesmophytes, 'jug handles', between vertebrae
- In the mutilating form of the disease, the middle phalanx, for example, may dissolve completely.
- Changes in X-rays may appear early.
- Articular ultrasonography will show thickened synovial membranes with increased blood flow, increased amounts of synovial fluid, increased blood flow in the periosteum, callus formation, erosions and tendonitis.
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can be used to confirm vertebral and sacroiliac (SI) joint inflammation before changes can be seen in conventional X-ray. MRI is important also in the assessment of the inflammation and changes in large joints, such as the hip joints. The need for MRI will be defined by a specialist.
- In a fresh psoriatic arthritis, treatment that aims at remission may significantly improve the status of the joints.
- Traditional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (sDMARD), anti-inflammatory analgesics and biological drugs are used for treatment.
- Treatment depends on assessment by patient and doctor, the number of inflamed joints, radiological progress and degree of disease of the skin.
- If, however, there are several symptomatic joints or the disease is progressive, methotrexate, or if it is contraindicated sulphasalazine, is used already at an early stage.
- A mild psoriatic arthritis is treated with NSAIDs and local intra-articular glucocorticoid injections.
- If local glucorticoid injections do not suppress the arthritis adequately, the first-line therapy is methotrexate.
- General remarks
- Anti-inflammatory analgesics are used particularly in the beginning of the disease; for the form of disease with spondylarthritis and enthesitis, treatment may be needed for several years.
- Methotrexate is the primary sDMARD for psoriatic arthritis. If methotrexate is contraindicated, sulfasalazine is chosen. Methotrexate often also alleviates cutaneous symptoms.
- Sudden withdrawal of high-dose systemic glucocorticoids may aggravate cutaneous psoriasis.
- Ciclosporin is may be effective in the treatment of both skin and joint symptoms, but is is not suitable for long-term treatment.
- Intra-articular glucocorticoid injections are usually effective.
- Biological drugs (bDMARD) alleviate both skin and joint inflammation.
- According to clinical experience, the prognosis of psoriatic arthritis is often better than that of rheumatoid arthritis, and treatment started without delay may predict a milder clinical course.
Treatment chain
- Patients, whose joint disease is stable, are usually followed-up within primary health care. Also the screening and treatment of associated diseases can be carried out in primary health care.
- In active and progressive disease, the treatment of psoriatic arthritis is often carried out in cooperation by primary health care, a dermatologist and a rheumatologist.
- Without consulting a specialist, a physician in primary health care may provide symptomatic treatment and intra-articular glucocorticoid injections for mild psoriatic arthritis.
- Mild disease usually causes joint pain or rarely inflammation of individual joints.
- Patients to be referred for an assessment by a rheumatologist include those with fresh polyarthritis (inflammation of more than 4 joints), with a disease that resembles ankylosing spondylitis or with a prolonged inflammation of a few (less than 4) joints that responds poorly to NSAIDs and local glucocorticoid injections or when X-rays show progressive changes.
- Later on, treatment can usually be provided either entirely in primary health care or the responsibility shared with specialized care.
- Severe forms of disease are treated in specialized care.
- Children with psoriatic arthritis should be treated in specialized care.
- Before pregnancy, a safe pharmacotherapy to be used during pregnacy should be planned and, as required, a rheumatologist consulted.
Follow-up
- Results of treatment should be followed up and assessed regularly.
- Full care of the patients should include screening and careful treatment of diseases associated with psoriasis.
- The medication needs to be monitored by safety tests. See locally available guidance.
- The special features of biological medicines (bDMARD) should be kept in mind in primary health care, too.
- Measurement tools are available for following up and assessing response to treatment.
- In the peripheral form of disease, response to treatment can be assessed using indicators used for the follow-up and assessment of response to treatment in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (DAS28, ACR response, HAQ, VAS)
- The form of disease with spondylarthritis can be monitored using indicators of response to the treatment of ankylosing spondylitis (BASFI, BASDAI, VAS).
- In patients with enthesitis, response to treatment can be assessed using VAS and MASES indicators.
References
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- Prey S, Paul C, Bronsard V et al. Assessment of risk of psoriatic arthritis in patients with plaque psoriasis: a systematic review of the literature. J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol 2010;24 Suppl 2():31-5. [PubMed]
- Christophers E, Barker JN, Griffiths CE et al. The risk of psoriatic arthritis remains constant following initial diagnosis of psoriasis among patients seen in European dermatology clinics. J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol 2010;24(5):548-54. [PubMed]
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