The impact of nail psoriasis on disease activity, quality of life, and clinical variables in patients with psoriatic arthritis: A cross-sectional multicenter study
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info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccessDate
2023Author
Cengiz, GizemNas, Kemal
Keskin, Yaşar
Kılıç, Erkan
Sargın, Betül
Kasman, Sevtap Acer
Alkan, Hakan
Şahin, Nilay
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Aim: Nail involvement is common in psoriatic arthritis. This study assesses clinical
characteristics, nail psoriasis prevalence, and impact of nail psoriasis on disease activity in patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA).
Method: This cross-sectional multicenter study was conducted by the Turkish League
Against Rheumatism using PsA patients recruited from 25 centers. Demographic and
clinical characteristics of PsA patients, such as disease activity measures, quality of
life, and nail involvement findings were assessed during routine follow-up examinations. Patients were divided into two groups according to the presence or absence of
nail psoriasis and compared using the χ2
test or Fisher exact test for categorical variables and the t-test or Mann-Whitney U test for continuous variables.
Results: In 1122 individuals with PsA, 645 (57.5%) displayed nail psoriasis. The most
frequent features of fingernails were ridges (38%), followed by pitting (21%) and
onycholysis (19%). More females were present in both groups (with and without nail
psoriasis; 64% vs 67%, P< 0.282). Patients with nail psoriasis were older, indicated
more pain and fatigue, experienced greater swelling, tender joint counts, and skin
disease severity, and had a higher disease activity score compared with those without
nail psoriasis (all P< 0.05).
Conclusion: We demonstrate an increased prevalence of nail psoriasis observed in
patients with psoriatic arthritis. Patients with nail involvement experience increased
disease activity, lower quality of life, and diminished mental and physical status compared with those without nail involvement.
Source
International Journal of Rheumatic DiseasesVolume
26Issue
1URI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1756-185X.144421756-1841 / 1756-185X
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12462/13259