Abstract

Psoriasis is associated with increased risk for cardiovascular disease. To compare major cardiovascular event risk in psoriasis patients receiving methotrexate or tumor necrosis factor-α inhibitor (TNFi) and to assess TNFi treatment duration impact on major cardiovascular event risk. Adult psoriasis patients with ≥2 TNFi or methotrexate prescriptions in the Truven MarketScan Databases (Q1 2000-Q3 2011) were classified as TNFi or methotrexate users. The index date for each of these drugs was the TNFi initiation date or a randomly selected methotrexate dispensing date, respectively. Cardiovascular event risks and cumulative TNFi effect were analyzed by using multivariate Cox proportional-hazards models. By 12months, TNFi users (N=9148) had fewer cardiovascular events than methotrexate users (N=8581) (Kaplan-Meier rates: 1.45% vs 4.09%: P<.01). TNFi users had overall lower cardiovascular event hazards than methotrexate users (hazard ratio=0.55; P<.01). Over 24months' median follow-up, every 6months of cumulative exposure to TNFis were associated with an 11% cardiovascular event risk reduction (P=.02). Lack of clinical assessment measures. Psoriasis patients receiving TNFis had a lower major cardiovascular event risk compared to those receiving methotrexate. Cumulative exposure to TNFis was associated with a reduced risk for major cardiovascular events.

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