Why Do Optimal Targets for Itch and Skin Clearance Matter in Atopic Dermatitis Treatment? Insights from TARGET-DERM AD Registry

Main Article Content

Jonathan I. Silverberg
Christopher G. Bunick
Brian M. Calimlim
Ayman Grada
Keith D. Knapp
Breda Munoz
Julie M. Crawford
Chibuzo Obi
Amy S. Paller

Keywords

TARGET-DERM AD, Itch, Skin Clearance, Atopic Dermatitis, Therapeutic Inertia, Optimal Itch Relief, Worst Itch, AHEAD, Treat-To-Target, DLQI, POEM, Sleep-NRS, Pain-NRS

Abstract

Introduction/Background: Atopic dermatitis (AD) patients undergoing treatment may only experience partial improvement in itch and skin lesions, often leading to suboptimal outcomes. The Aiming High in Eczema/Atopic Dermatitis (AHEAD) treat-to-target recommendations emphasize the importance of achieving optimal treatment targets, such as complete or near-complete itch relief and skin clearance. However, there is limited evidence on the impact of achieving these higher efficacy targets on patient-reported outcomes and quality of life in AD.


Objectives: To evaluate the independent and combined effects of achieving optimal treatment targets for itch and skin clearance on patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in AD, based on the AHEAD treat-to-target recommendations.


Method: A cross-sectional analysis was conducted on adult participants in TARGET-DERM AD, a longitudinal study with over 4,000 participants across 52 U.S. and Canadian clinical-practice sites (2019-2024). Itch severity was measured using the PROMIS Itch-Severity question (NRS-Itch, 0–10 scale), with scores of 0/1 indicating no or minimal itch. Skin severity was assessed using the validated Investigator Global Assessment (vIGA-AD), where 0/1 represents clear or almost clear skin. Associations between itch and skin severity with optimal patient outcomes including POEM 0–2 (clear/almost-clear disease), DLQI 0/1 (minimal/no impact on quality of life), NRS-Sleep 0/1, and NRS-Pain 0/1 were evaluated. Logistic regression models examined the main and interaction effects of itch and skin severity.


Results: Among 1,920 patients (58.6% female; 54.5% Non-Hispanic White; 93.8% US; mean age 45 years), optimal DLQI, POEM, NRS-Sleep, and NRS-Pain occurred most frequently among those achieving the optimal treatment targets for itch (WI-NRS 0/1; 52.1%, 53.7%, 57.3%, and 83.1%, respectively) and skin clearance (vIGA-AD 0/1; 44.7%, 44.3%, 44.7%, and 74.3%, respectively).  Compared to partial improvement, the adjusted odds ratios (aOR) of optimal PROs were greatest for participants with complete or near-complete resolution of both itch and skin lesions (DLQI 0/1: 20.0; POEM 0-2: 41.7; Sleep-NRS: 16.1; Pain-NRS: 6.0).


Conclusions: Achieving optimal treatment targets for both itch and skin lesions markedly enhances patient-reported outcomes in AD.  The results of this real-world study support treat-to-optimal targets to assess therapeutic effectiveness and optimize patient outcomes.

References

1. Silverberg, J. I., et al. (2024). "Combining treat‐to‐target principles and shared decision‐making: International expert consensus‐based recommendations with a novel concept for minimal disease activity criteria in atopic dermatitis." Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.

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