
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In this special live episode of Derms and Conditions, recorded at the Fall Clinical Dermatology 2024 Meeting, host Dr James Q. Del Rosso welcomes Dr April Armstrong, chief of dermatology at UCLA, to discuss key highlights from the conference. Together, they cover the latest in psoriasis treatments, promising developments for vitiligo, advances in hidradenitis suppurativa, and much more.
The discussion kicks off with psoriasis, where exciting progress in oral TYK2, IL-23, and IL-17A inhibitors is providing potential for effective, safe options for moderate-to-severe cases. For atopic dermatitis, they review the recent approval of lebrikizumab and the real-world efficacy of tralokinumab for head and neck involvement. They also spotlight OX40/OX40 ligand inhibitors—amlitelimab and rocatinlimab—as promising long-acting treatments currently in development.
In prurigo nodularis, the newly approved nemolizumab, an IL-31 inhibitor, offers antifibrotic benefits and has notably not shown evidence of conjunctivitis risk seen with other biologics. For vitiligo, BET inhibitors are creating new opportunities by targeting epigenomics, and several JAK inhibitors are pending phase 3 data. For hidradenitis suppurativa, focus has shifted from TNF inhibitors to IL-17 inhibitors like secukinumab, with bimekizumab and oral JAK inhibitors, including povarcitinib, in late-stage development.
They round out the episode with chronic hand eczema, where topical ruxolitinib and delgocitinib—a pan-JAK inhibitor recently approved in Europe—show encouraging results.
Tune in to the full episode for a full recap of these developments and other breakthroughs from the Fall Clinical Dermatology 2024 Meeting!
4.9
4747 ratings
In this special live episode of Derms and Conditions, recorded at the Fall Clinical Dermatology 2024 Meeting, host Dr James Q. Del Rosso welcomes Dr April Armstrong, chief of dermatology at UCLA, to discuss key highlights from the conference. Together, they cover the latest in psoriasis treatments, promising developments for vitiligo, advances in hidradenitis suppurativa, and much more.
The discussion kicks off with psoriasis, where exciting progress in oral TYK2, IL-23, and IL-17A inhibitors is providing potential for effective, safe options for moderate-to-severe cases. For atopic dermatitis, they review the recent approval of lebrikizumab and the real-world efficacy of tralokinumab for head and neck involvement. They also spotlight OX40/OX40 ligand inhibitors—amlitelimab and rocatinlimab—as promising long-acting treatments currently in development.
In prurigo nodularis, the newly approved nemolizumab, an IL-31 inhibitor, offers antifibrotic benefits and has notably not shown evidence of conjunctivitis risk seen with other biologics. For vitiligo, BET inhibitors are creating new opportunities by targeting epigenomics, and several JAK inhibitors are pending phase 3 data. For hidradenitis suppurativa, focus has shifted from TNF inhibitors to IL-17 inhibitors like secukinumab, with bimekizumab and oral JAK inhibitors, including povarcitinib, in late-stage development.
They round out the episode with chronic hand eczema, where topical ruxolitinib and delgocitinib—a pan-JAK inhibitor recently approved in Europe—show encouraging results.
Tune in to the full episode for a full recap of these developments and other breakthroughs from the Fall Clinical Dermatology 2024 Meeting!
110,759 Listeners
17 Listeners
8,004 Listeners
14 Listeners
37 Listeners
4,351 Listeners
137 Listeners
1,473 Listeners
6 Listeners
1,158 Listeners
3 Listeners
0 Listeners
4 Listeners
27 Listeners
125 Listeners