The “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment for Immunocompromised Patients” (IM-PAKT) Project: An Expert Panel Opinion

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

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The “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment for Immunocompromised Patients” (IM-PAKT) Project : An Expert Panel Opinion. / Szeimies, Rolf Markus; Ulrich, Claas; Ferrándiz-Pulido, Carla; Hofbauer, Gunther F.L.; Lear, John Thomas; Lebbé, Celeste; Piaserico, Stefano; Hædersdal, Merete.

I: Dermatology and Therapy, 2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Szeimies, RM, Ulrich, C, Ferrándiz-Pulido, C, Hofbauer, GFL, Lear, JT, Lebbé, C, Piaserico, S & Hædersdal, M 2024, 'The “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment for Immunocompromised Patients” (IM-PAKT) Project: An Expert Panel Opinion', Dermatology and Therapy. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13555-024-01215-y

APA

Szeimies, R. M., Ulrich, C., Ferrándiz-Pulido, C., Hofbauer, G. F. L., Lear, J. T., Lebbé, C., Piaserico, S., & Hædersdal, M. (Accepteret/In press). The “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment for Immunocompromised Patients” (IM-PAKT) Project: An Expert Panel Opinion. Dermatology and Therapy. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13555-024-01215-y

Vancouver

Szeimies RM, Ulrich C, Ferrándiz-Pulido C, Hofbauer GFL, Lear JT, Lebbé C o.a. The “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment for Immunocompromised Patients” (IM-PAKT) Project: An Expert Panel Opinion. Dermatology and Therapy. 2024. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13555-024-01215-y

Author

Szeimies, Rolf Markus ; Ulrich, Claas ; Ferrándiz-Pulido, Carla ; Hofbauer, Gunther F.L. ; Lear, John Thomas ; Lebbé, Celeste ; Piaserico, Stefano ; Hædersdal, Merete. / The “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment for Immunocompromised Patients” (IM-PAKT) Project : An Expert Panel Opinion. I: Dermatology and Therapy. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{b3996c03a52c4d2b86552c8d33539cef,
title = "The “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment for Immunocompromised Patients” (IM-PAKT) Project: An Expert Panel Opinion",
abstract = "Actinic keratosis (AK) is an intraepithelial condition characterized by the development of scaly, erythematous lesions after repeated exposure to ultraviolet radiation. Significant immunosuppression is a risk factor for the development of AK and subsequent lesion progression to squamous cell carcinoma. Immunocompromised patients (ICPs), particularly organ transplant recipients, often have more advanced or complex AK presentations and an increased risk of skin carcinomas versus non-ICPs with AK, making lesions more difficult to treat and resulting in worse treatment outcomes. The recent “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment” (PAKT) consensus reported that delivering patient-centric care may play a role in supporting better clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction with treatments for chronic dermatologic conditions such as AK, which require repeated cycles of treatment. Additionally, currently published guidance and recommendations were considered by the PAKT panel to be overly broad for managing ICPs with their unique and complex needs. Therefore, the “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment for Immunocompromised Patients” (IM-PAKT) panel was established to build upon general recommendations from the PAKT consensus. The panel identified current gaps in guidance for AK care in ICPs, offered practical care approaches based on typical ICP scenarios, and highlighted the need to adapt AK management to optimize care and improve treatment outcomes in ICPs. In particular, dermatologists should establish collaborative and transparent relationships with patients{\textquoteright} multidisciplinary teams to enhance overall care for patients{\textquoteright} comorbidities: given their increased risk of progression to malignancy, earlier assessments/interventions and frequent follow-ups are vital. The panel also developed a novel “triage” tool outlining effective treatment follow-up and disease surveillance plans tailored to patients{\textquoteright} risk profiles, guided by current clinical presentation and relevant medical history. Additionally, we present the panel{\textquoteright}s expert opinion on three fictional ICP scenarios to explain their decision-making process for assessing and managing typical ICPs that they may encounter in clinical practice.",
keywords = "Actinic keratosis, Expert testimony, Immunocompromised host, Organ transplantation, Treatment outcomes",
author = "Szeimies, {Rolf Markus} and Claas Ulrich and Carla Ferr{\'a}ndiz-Pulido and Hofbauer, {Gunther F.L.} and Lear, {John Thomas} and Celeste Lebb{\'e} and Stefano Piaserico and Merete H{\ae}dersdal",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} The Author(s) 2024.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1007/s13555-024-01215-y",
language = "English",
journal = "Dermatology and Therapy",
issn = "2190-9172",
publisher = "Springer Verlag",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment for Immunocompromised Patients” (IM-PAKT) Project

T2 - An Expert Panel Opinion

AU - Szeimies, Rolf Markus

AU - Ulrich, Claas

AU - Ferrándiz-Pulido, Carla

AU - Hofbauer, Gunther F.L.

AU - Lear, John Thomas

AU - Lebbé, Celeste

AU - Piaserico, Stefano

AU - Hædersdal, Merete

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Actinic keratosis (AK) is an intraepithelial condition characterized by the development of scaly, erythematous lesions after repeated exposure to ultraviolet radiation. Significant immunosuppression is a risk factor for the development of AK and subsequent lesion progression to squamous cell carcinoma. Immunocompromised patients (ICPs), particularly organ transplant recipients, often have more advanced or complex AK presentations and an increased risk of skin carcinomas versus non-ICPs with AK, making lesions more difficult to treat and resulting in worse treatment outcomes. The recent “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment” (PAKT) consensus reported that delivering patient-centric care may play a role in supporting better clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction with treatments for chronic dermatologic conditions such as AK, which require repeated cycles of treatment. Additionally, currently published guidance and recommendations were considered by the PAKT panel to be overly broad for managing ICPs with their unique and complex needs. Therefore, the “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment for Immunocompromised Patients” (IM-PAKT) panel was established to build upon general recommendations from the PAKT consensus. The panel identified current gaps in guidance for AK care in ICPs, offered practical care approaches based on typical ICP scenarios, and highlighted the need to adapt AK management to optimize care and improve treatment outcomes in ICPs. In particular, dermatologists should establish collaborative and transparent relationships with patients’ multidisciplinary teams to enhance overall care for patients’ comorbidities: given their increased risk of progression to malignancy, earlier assessments/interventions and frequent follow-ups are vital. The panel also developed a novel “triage” tool outlining effective treatment follow-up and disease surveillance plans tailored to patients’ risk profiles, guided by current clinical presentation and relevant medical history. Additionally, we present the panel’s expert opinion on three fictional ICP scenarios to explain their decision-making process for assessing and managing typical ICPs that they may encounter in clinical practice.

AB - Actinic keratosis (AK) is an intraepithelial condition characterized by the development of scaly, erythematous lesions after repeated exposure to ultraviolet radiation. Significant immunosuppression is a risk factor for the development of AK and subsequent lesion progression to squamous cell carcinoma. Immunocompromised patients (ICPs), particularly organ transplant recipients, often have more advanced or complex AK presentations and an increased risk of skin carcinomas versus non-ICPs with AK, making lesions more difficult to treat and resulting in worse treatment outcomes. The recent “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment” (PAKT) consensus reported that delivering patient-centric care may play a role in supporting better clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction with treatments for chronic dermatologic conditions such as AK, which require repeated cycles of treatment. Additionally, currently published guidance and recommendations were considered by the PAKT panel to be overly broad for managing ICPs with their unique and complex needs. Therefore, the “Personalising Actinic Keratosis Treatment for Immunocompromised Patients” (IM-PAKT) panel was established to build upon general recommendations from the PAKT consensus. The panel identified current gaps in guidance for AK care in ICPs, offered practical care approaches based on typical ICP scenarios, and highlighted the need to adapt AK management to optimize care and improve treatment outcomes in ICPs. In particular, dermatologists should establish collaborative and transparent relationships with patients’ multidisciplinary teams to enhance overall care for patients’ comorbidities: given their increased risk of progression to malignancy, earlier assessments/interventions and frequent follow-ups are vital. The panel also developed a novel “triage” tool outlining effective treatment follow-up and disease surveillance plans tailored to patients’ risk profiles, guided by current clinical presentation and relevant medical history. Additionally, we present the panel’s expert opinion on three fictional ICP scenarios to explain their decision-making process for assessing and managing typical ICPs that they may encounter in clinical practice.

KW - Actinic keratosis

KW - Expert testimony

KW - Immunocompromised host

KW - Organ transplantation

KW - Treatment outcomes

U2 - 10.1007/s13555-024-01215-y

DO - 10.1007/s13555-024-01215-y

M3 - Review

C2 - 38902589

AN - SCOPUS:85196376551

JO - Dermatology and Therapy

JF - Dermatology and Therapy

SN - 2190-9172

ER -

ID: 395993228