Psoriasis patients can get clearer skin with at-home treatment instead of at doctors’ offices, study suggests

Psoriasis patients can get clearer skin with at-home treatment instead of at doctors’ offices, study suggests
Credit: Estzer Miller on Pixabay

For decades, people with psoriasis have been treated in clinics with narrowband ultraviolet B phototherapy, or light therapy, to reduce sores, scales, and inflammation. Now, new research from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania shows that patients can improve their psoriasis just as well at home with phototherapy devices designed to make treatment easy to self-administer.

Results of the LITE study (Light Treatment Effectiveness study), published in JAMA Dermatology, found that 60% of patients who followed the recommended course twice a week at home or in a clinic had clear or mostly clear skin after 12 weeks of treatment. But patients who received at-home treatment were more likely to adhere to the prescribed treatment and were able to do so more easily than getting treatment in a doctor’s office, which brings costs for both time and travel.

“Our research should influence right away,” said lead author Joel Gelfand, MD, the James J. Leyden, M.D. Endowed Professor in Clinical Investigation in the Department of Dermatology at Penn and the medical director of Penn’s Psoriasis and Phototherapy Treatment Center. “Many cover at home but make it very difficult to obtain coverage, causing long delays when patients need treatment immediately. Insurance companies should make the approval process easier for this treatment, and dermatology providers should prescribe home phototherapy for management of when medically appropriate and when preferred by their patients.”

Phototherapy is provided by machines that resemble tanning beds or that can be smaller devices for hands or feet, but they emit a specific wavelength of ultraviolet light that treats psoriasis effectively without exposing patients to the cancer-causing wavelengths that are found in commercial tanning beds. Phototherapy is often used in combination with pills and biologic therapies for psoriasis (12% of patients were taking these medications during the LITE study).

Compliance with phototherapy at clinics can be challenging

The number of sessions and the duration can vary depending on the severity of the psoriasis symptoms. Most patients need treatments lasting a few minutes each 2-3 times per week for about 12 weeks. Considering that there might be travel costs and time off work required to visit a clinic, accessing phototherapy can be a hurdle. In the study, patients spent an average of 50 minutes per treatment traveling to and from the office, with an average of $20 in travel costs for each visit.

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