Andy Blauvelt, MD, MBA, president of Oregon Medical Research Center, recommends new novel topical therapies over topical steroids for patients with atopic dermatitis (AD).
Andy Blauvelt, MD, MBA, president of Oregon Medical Research Center, recommends that patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) ask their dermatologists about new topical therapies instead of using topical steroids.
Transcript
What advice do you have for patients with atopic dermatitis who are seeking new treatment options or struggling to manage their symptoms?
That's a really, really important question because, unfortunately, what I see among a lot of dermatologists, and what I hear when I see eczema patients coming into my office for clinical trials, is that many of them have only been offered topical steroids for years and years and years. I referred to that earlier when I said a "serial topical prescriber" over and over and over again, so the patients think that there's nothing else.
My advice to patients is to know that there are a number of great treatments available out there—not only systemic treatments as I discussed (such as) oral JAK inhibitors and biologics, but a number of new novel topical therapies. Not just topical ruxolitinib, but we're going to see topical tapinarof and topical roflumilast approved for atopic dermatitis with nonsteroidal topical options that work terrifically.
My advice to patients is push your dermatologist. Push them away from topical steroids, which I think is actually a horrible treatment for long-term management of AD. I think it's fine for short-term knockout of the disease, but for long-term management of a chronic disease, I think topical steroids are a poor choice, and yet you'II see that over and over again in practice, and patients tell you over and over again.
So, get out of the topical steroid rut. Ask your doctors about the novel new treatments, many of which are going to be better options than that topical steroid route that patients have done for so many years.
This transcript has been lightly edited for clarity.
Managed Care Cast Presents: BTK Inhibitors in Treatment-Naive Patients With CLL and MCL
December 26th 2024A trio of experts discuss the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) with Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitors, including cost considerations.
Listen
HS Treatment Goals: Better Quality of Life, Not Just Control
January 3rd 2025For part 3 of our discussion with Chris Sayed, MD, we tackle several important topics in the hidradenitis suppurative (HS) and inflammatory disease space: patient quality of life, medication and treatment goals, and the possibility of a cure.
Read More
Dr Yehuda Handelsman: DCRM Guidelines Are Shaping Integrated, Global CRM Care
January 3rd 2025In part 2 of our interview, Yehuda Handelsman, MD, discusses how cardiorenalmetabolic (CRM) disease management is advancing with the 2022 Diabetes, Cardiorenal, and Metabolic (DCRM) multispecialty practice recommendations and the updated DCRM 2.0 guidelines.
Read More
Stripped of Fucose, Powerful Monoclonal Antibody Shows Promising Results in MDS Dosing Study
January 2nd 2025Nicole Grieselhuber, MD, PhD, of The Ohio State University, discusses results from Part D of a dosing study involving patients with previously untreated higher-risk myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) who were treated with a combination of SEA-CD70 and azacitidine.
Read More