Psoriasis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Weight Reduction Alone May Not be Sufficient to Maintain Disease Remission in Obese Patients With Psoriasis: a Randomized, Investigator-blinded Study
The relative risk of psoriasis and its severity are directly related to the body mass index (BMI).Patients with psoriasis likely undergo a vicious circle where obesity and skin disease reinforce each other. To investigate patients' opinion about their body weight (BW), the possibility of dietary approach to psoriasis, and to examine the adherence and the effects of hypo-energetic diet to maintain disease remission in obese patients a dedicated questionnaire was administered to 200 consecutive patients (125 men and 75 women) with moderate-to-severe chronic plaque psoriasis investigating whether diet factors could influence psoriasis severity and course. In second part of study, obese patients with psoriasis in remission (PASI improvement ≥ 75%) for at least 12 weeks after methotrexate therapy were randomly assigned to receive a hypo-caloric diet or free diet for 24 weeks, and then followed up for additional 12 weeks.
Chronic plaque psoriasis is an inflammatory skin disease associated with obesity in 13-34%
of cases. In recent years, the prevalence of overweight and obesity has increased in almost
all developed countries.Obesity and a high body mass index have been shown to be risk
factors for the development of psoriasis and in large, prospective studies obesity precede
the development of psoriasis. More recently, obesity in adulthood has been shown to be a
risk factor also for psoriatic arthritis. On the other hand, ones psoriasis has been
established it may favor behaviors facilitating overweight and obesity.
To investigate patients' opinion about their BW, the possibility of dietary approach to
psoriasis, a specific questionnaire was administered to 200 consecutive patients with
moderate-to-severe chronic plaque psoriasis. In a second part of the study, a 24-week
randomized, controlled, investigator-blinded clinical trial was performed on a limited
number of patient to see whether hypo-caloric diet to maintain disease remission in obese
patients previously treated with methotrexate. Patients were recruited from those
consecutively admitted to the psoriasis outpatient clinic of the University Hospital of
Verona. The inclusion criteria were: patients ≥ 18 year of age with moderate to severe
psoriasis and a BMI ≥ 30 and without psoriasis arthritis, who were treated with methotrexate
and had obtained a reduction in psoriasis severity of at least 75% (PASI 75) for the 12
weeks before enrolling into the study. Exclusion criteria were other types of psoriasis
(guttate, erythrodermic and pustular psoriasis) and severe obesity (BMI >35). All patients
gave their written informed consent before any study-related procedures were performed. All
subjects were visited by two dermatologists who recorded demographic, biometrical, and other
relevant patient's data. Visits were scheduled at screening, baseline, and every 4 weeks up
to 24. Collected data included age, sex, weight, height, BMI, psoriasis duration and
concomitant medications. The dermatologist who performed the PASI scoring was unaware of the
randomization assignment. Patients stopped methotrexate therapy and were randomly assigned
either of two groups: the first group received a low-calorie diet administered by a
dietitian (intervention group) whereas the second group did not receive any dietetic
recommendation (control group). Randomization was performed with the use of
computer-generated random numbers and block size of 4 subjects. Patients underwent clinical
and nutritional follow-up every month. The low-calorie diet was designed to achieve a loss
of 5-10% of initial body weight. The caloric restriction was 500 kcal below the resting
energy expenditure, as evaluated by the Harris-Benedict equation. Intervention group
patients received a balanced diet scheme, based on a caloric intake reduction related to BMI
and sex (range: 1200-1500 kcal/d for women, 1300-1600 kcal/d for men). Relapses were
considered as loss of 50% of PASI improvement score from baseline pre-methotrexate value.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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