Latest News

Review Finds No Short-term MACE, VTE risk with JAK Inhibitors For Dermatoses


 

FROM JAMA DERMATOLOGY

Reassuring Results?

Dr. Ireland and coauthors said the finding should help to reassure clinicians that the short-term use of JAK-STAT inhibitors in patients with dermatological conditions with low cardiovascular risk profiles “appears to be both safe and well tolerated.” They cautioned, however, that “clinicians must remain judicious” when using these medications for longer periods and in high-risk patient populations.

This was a pragmatic meta-analysis that provides useful information for dermatologists, Adam Friedman, MD, professor and chair of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, DC, said in an interview.

“When there are safety concerns, I think that’s where data like this are so important to not just allay the fears of practitioners, but also to arm the practitioner with information for when they discuss a possible treatment with a patient,” said Dr. Friedman, who was not involved in the study.

“What’s unique here is that they’re looking at any possible use of JAK inhibitors for dermatological disease,” so this represents patients that dermatologists would be seeing, he added.

“The limitation here is time, we only can say so much about the safety of the medication with the data that we have,” Dr. Friedman said. Almost 4 months is “a good amount of time” to know about the cardiovascular risks, he said, but added, what happens then? Will the risk increase and will patients need to be switched to another medication?

“There’s no line in the sand,” with regard to using a JAK-STAT inhibitor. “If you look at the label, they’re not meant to be used incrementally,” but as ongoing treatment, while considering the needs of the patient and the relative risks and benefits, he said.

With that in mind, “the open label extension studies for all these [JAK-STAT inhibitors] are really, really important to get a sense of ‘do new signals emerge down the road.’ ”

The meta-analysis received no commercial funding. One author of the work reported personal fees from several pharmaceutical companies which were done outside of analysis. Dr. Friedman has received research funding from or acted as a consultant for several pharmaceutical companies including, Incyte, Pfizer, Eli Lily, and AbbVie.

Pages

Recommended Reading

MDedge Daily News: How to handle opioid constipation
MDedge Cardiology
Atopic eczema linked to cardiovascular disease risk
MDedge Cardiology
Today’s top news highlights: Primary care practices struggle, Americans split on COVID-19 vaccine
MDedge Cardiology
Study aims to enhance understanding of ‘tremendously understudied’ prurigo nodularis
MDedge Cardiology
‘Gold cards’ allow Texas docs to skip prior authorizations
MDedge Cardiology
CRP elevated in adults with AD and sleep disturbance
MDedge Cardiology
New AAD guidelines eye comorbidities in adults with atopic dermatitis
MDedge Cardiology
‘I shall harm’
MDedge Cardiology
VTE risk not elevated in AD patients on JAK inhibitors: Study
MDedge Cardiology
Review finds no CV or VTE risk signal with use of JAK inhibitors for skin indications
MDedge Cardiology