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Management of psoriatic arthritis among cutaneous psoriasis patients: from pathogenesis to therapy.

Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is an inflammatory rheumatism belonging to spondyloarthritis family and which occurs in about 30% of patients with psoriasis. The pathogenesis entails a genetic predisposition, environmental and immunologic factors. Most of the time, cutaneous lesions precede apparition of articular manifestations and dermatologists who treat psoriatic patients have to regularly screen for early PsA, especially in patients with risk factors (notably nail psoriasis). Early detection greatly increases the chances for successful treatment and can prevent slow joint destruction. EULAR and GRAPPA have recently published PsA treatment recommendations. Pharmacological therapies for PsA begin with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, then conventional synthetic as methotrexate, and lastly biological disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs. There are significant metabolic comorbidities and increased cardiovascular morbidity in patients with PsA. This aspect must be taken into account in PsA management by pharmaceutical and non-pharmaceutical approach (including educational programs). Close collaboration between dermatologists, rheumatologists and primary care clinicians is recommended to provide optimum care and to prevent the occurrence of structural damages or quality of life alteration.

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