BackgroundHidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a chronic debilitating skin disease, frequently located in the groin and anogenital area, leading to a substantial impact on quality of life and sexual health in patients with HS. Skin‐tissue‐sparing excision with electrosurgical peeling (STEEP) is a procedure with known low recurrence rates and high patient satisfaction in retrospective series. However, a prospective study to investigate the impact of any major surgery on specific aspects of the quality of life has not yet been performed.ObjectiveTo assess surgical outcomes and the effect of major surgery on the general quality of life, sexual health and activity impairment in patients with HS.Materials and methodsA single centre prospective survey study was conducted among 40 patients undergoing major surgery. Surveys were completed prior to the surgery and 2, 6, 12 and 26 weeks after surgery. Besides the objective parameters (time to wound closure and surface of the wound), patient‐reported outcomes were reported.ResultsThirty‐nine patients with a total of 171 survey responses were included for analysis. Patients with Hurley stage I or II had a shorter time to wound closure (TTWC) compared to patients with Hurley stage III (P = 0.005). TTWC was significantly prolonged in patients treated with biologics (P < 0.001). Smoking did not significantly influence TTWC. For patient‐reported outcomes, DLQI and ASEX scores did not significantly improve during the study period of 6 months. However, activity and overall work impairment showed considerable improvement after surgery.ConclusionTime to wound closure is significantly prolonged by higher Hurley stage and treatment with biologics, contrastingly not by smoking. Major surgery improved the overall work and daily activity impairment.
Staged surgical excision is superior in clearance and recurrence rates to wide local excision for lentigo maligna and should be considered as the treatment of first choice in national and international guidelines.
Psoriasis is a chronic autoimmune disease which affects millions of people worldwide. Not only can psoriasis itself be debilitating and significantly reduce an individual's quality of life, but it is also a risk factor for other systemic disorders, such as metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular disease, and malignancy. Tremendous strides were made in the treatment of psoriasis during the mid-to-late-20th century, including the emergence of topical corticosteroids and vitamin D analogs, methotrexate, systemic retinoids, and phototherapy. However, it was not until 2004 with the advent of systemic biologic agents, which precisely target components of the immune system involved in the pathophysiological process of psoriasis, that the primary treatment benchmark increased from 50% improvement in the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI 50) to PASI 75, PASI 90, and even PASI 100, or complete resolution of cutaneous disease. Today, many patients receiving biologic therapy routinely experience greater than 75% or 90% reduction in cutaneous disease burden and a significant improvement in overall quality of life. These biologic agents are generally well-tolerated and safe but, like any medication, have associated adverse effects, some of which are predictable based on the effects of immune modulation, animal model studies, and human populations with known cytokine deficiencies. Going forward, it will be important to carefully monitor the safety profiles of these agents in both clinical trials and post-marketing surveillance registries to ensure long-term safety. It is reassuring that large safety registries are consistent in demonstrating an improved safety profile with newer and emerging biologic therapies.
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