Abstract

BackgroundPsoriasis imposes a disease burden that can have a profound negative impact on patients' quality of life (QoL). HOPE was the first non‐interventional study conducted in patients with severe chronic plaque psoriasis in Australia that evaluated health‐related QoL in response to treatment with secukinumab.MethodsHOPE was a prospective, open‐label, single‐arm, multicentre, non‐interventional, exploratory study in patients with severe chronic plaque psoriasis in Australia. The study investigated the change in QoL, using the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI), Assessment Quality of Life‐8 Dimension questionnaire (AQoL‐8D) and Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI), and safety profile in response to treatment with secukinumab 300 mg SC weekly for 4 weeks followed by monthly maintenance for 58 weeks.ResultsAt Week 14, the mean percentage reduction in total DLQI score from baseline was −82.4% (n = 65), which indicates a substantial improvement in QoL. This level of improvement was sustained up to Week ≥58, with a mean percentage change of −87.4%. The mean percentage change from baseline for AQoL‐8D weighted total score decreased from Week 14 (41.1%) to Week 58 (35.2%), indicating an improvement in patients' QoL. A high proportion of patients achieved PASI 75/90/100 responses at Week 14 (97.0%/71.2%/34.8%), with rates sustained up to Week ≥58 (100%/87.9%/43.1%). The safety profile of secukinumab was favourable, with no cumulative or unexpected safety concerns.ConclusionSecukinumab treatment demonstrated a striking improvement in patients' QoL in the HOPE study, the first real‐world study in patients with severe chronic plaque psoriasis in the Australian clinical setting.

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