Abstract

Psoriasis (PsO) and Psoriatic Arthritis (PsA) are chronic, immune-mediated diseases that share common etiopathogenetic pathways. Up to 30% of PsO patient may later develop PsA. In nearly 75% of cases, skin psoriatic lesions precede arthritic symptoms, typically 10 years prior to the onset of joint symptoms, while PsO diagnosis occurring after the onset of arthritis is described only in 15% of cases. Therefore, skin involvement offers to the rheumatologist a unique opportunity to study PsA in a very early phase, having a cohort of psoriatic “risk patients” that may develop the disease and may benefit from preventive treatment. Progression from PsO to PsA is often characterized by non-specific musculoskeletal symptoms, subclinical synovio-entheseal inflammation, and occasionally asymptomatic digital swelling such as painless toe dactylitis, that frequently go unnoticed, leading to diagnostic delay. The early diagnosis of PsA is crucial for initiating a treatment prior the development of significant and permanent joint damage. With the ongoing development of pharmacological treatments, early interception of PsA has become a priority, but many obstacles have been reported in daily routine. The introduction of digital technology in rheumatology may fill the gap in the physician-patient relationship, allowing more targeted monitoring of PsO patients. Digital technology includes telemedicine, virtual visits, electronic health record, wearable technology, mobile health, artificial intelligence, and machine learning. Overall, this digital revolution could lead to earlier PsA diagnosis, improved follow-up and disease control as well as maximizing the referral capacity of rheumatic centers.

Highlights

  • Psoriasis (PsO) is a chronic, immune-mediated disease affecting 2–3% of the Caucasian population [1]

  • Up to one third of PsO patients will eventually progress to Psoriatic Arthritis (PsA) [from 6 to 42% [2]], a chronic, inflammatory and potentially debilitating arthropathy [3]

  • In nearly 75% of cases, psoriatic skin lesions precede arthritic symptoms, with an onset typically 10 years prior to joint symptoms, while PsO diagnosis occurring after the onset of arthritis is described only in 15% of PsA cases [4]

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Summary

Frontiers in Medicine

Marco G, McGonagle D, Quartuccio L, De Vita S, Errichetti E and Zabotti A (2021) The Digital Way to Intercept Psoriatic Arthritis. In nearly 75% of cases, skin psoriatic lesions precede arthritic symptoms, typically 10 years prior to the onset of joint symptoms, while PsO diagnosis occurring after the onset of arthritis is described only in 15% of cases. Virtual visits, electronic health record, wearable technology, mobile health, artificial intelligence, and machine learning. Overall, this digital revolution could lead to earlier PsA diagnosis, improved follow-up and disease control as well as maximizing the referral capacity of rheumatic centers

INTRODUCTION
The Digital Approach Applied to Psoriatic Disease
PsO Patients at Lower Risk of Developing PsA
Digital therapeutics
PsO Patients at Higher and Imminent Risk of Developing Arthritis
Findings
CONCLUSION
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