All Stories

  1. Health‐related quality of life in patients with melanoma – characterization of a Swedish cohort
  2. Complete skin clearance and Psoriasis Area and Severity Index response rates in clinical practice: predictors, health‐related quality of life improvements and implications for treatment goals
  3. What can we learn from ‘dropouts’ in clinical trials?
  4. Sustained Psoriasis Area and Severity Index, Dermatology Life Quality Index and EuroQol-5D response of biological treatment in psoriasis: 10 years of real-world data in the Swedish National Psoriasis Register
  5. Patient Registries for Safetyness
  6. How is disease severity associated with quality of life in psoriasis patients? Evidence from a longitudinal population-based study in Sweden
  7. Severity of Psoriasis Differs Between Men and Women: A Study of the Clinical Outcome Measure Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) in 5438 Swedish Register Patients
  8. Real-world outcomes in 2646 psoriasis patients: one in five has PASI ≥10 and/or DLQI ≥10 under ongoing systemic therapy
  9. Regional Differences in the Prescription of Biologics for Psoriasis in Sweden: A Register-Based Study of 4168 Patients
  10. Periodontal Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome Is Caused by Mutations in C1R and C1S , which Encode Subcomponents C1r and C1s of Complement
  11. Physical activity and lifestyle improvement in the management of psoriasis
  12. Healthcare Provider Type and Switch to Biologics in Psoriasis: Evidence from Real-World Practice
  13. Evaluating equality in psoriasis healthcare: a cohort study of the impact of age on prescription of biologics
  14. Register-Based Evaluation of Relative Effectiveness of New Therapies: Biologics Versus Conventional Agents in Treatment of Psoriasis in Sweden
  15. The Relationship Between Disease Severity and Quality of Life In Patients With Moderate to Severe Psoriasis
  16. Hair shaft structures in EDAR induced ectodermal dysplasia
  17. News and Notices
  18. Real-World Outcome Analysis of Continuously and Intermittently Treated Patients with Moderate to Severe Psoriasis after Switching to a Biologic Agent
  19. Resource Use in Patients with Psoriasis After the Introduction of Biologics in Sweden
  20. Decision for biological treatment in real life is more strongly associated with the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) than with the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI)
  21. EDAR-induced hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia: a clinical study on signs and symptoms in individuals with a heterozygous c.1072C > T mutation
  22. Health-Care Delay in Malignant Melanoma: Various Pathways to Diagnosis and Treatment
  23. Coping styles in decision-making among men and women diagnosed with malignant melanoma
  24. Systemic psoriasis therapy shows high between-country variation: a sign of unwarranted variation? Cross-sectional analysis of baseline data from the PSONET registries
  25. The Higher Proportion of Men with Psoriasis Treated with Biologics May Be Explained by More Severe Disease in Men
  26. Melbourne Decision Making Questionnaire--Swedish Version
  27. Analysis of three outcome measures in moderate to severe psoriasis: a registry-based study of 2450 patients
  28. Challenges for Synthesising Data in a Network of Registries for Systemic Psoriasis Therapies
  29. Switch to Biological Agent in Psoriasis Significantly Improved Clinical and Patient-Reported Outcomes in Real-World Practice
  30. Malignant melanoma: gender patterns in care seeking for suspect marks
  31. Patients’ decision making in seeking care for suspected malignant melanoma
  32. National Registries of Systemic Treatment for Psoriasis and the European ‘Psonet’ Initiative
  33. Switching Biologicals: Switching TNFα Antagonists in Psoriasis Treatment
  34. PsoReg – The Swedish Registry for Systemic Psoriasis Treatment
  35. Psoriasis Therapy in Real Life: The Need for Registries
  36. EDAR mutation in autosomal dominant hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia in two Swedish families
  37. Association scan of the novel psoriasis susceptibility region on chromosome 19: evidence for both susceptible and protective loci
  38. Interleukin-10 promoter polymorphism IL10.G and familial early onset psoriasis
  39. Association and Linkage of Human Leukocyte Antigens with Psoriasis – Revisited
  40. Comparative association analysis reveals that corneodesmosin is more closely associated with psoriasis than HLA-Cw*0602-B*5701 in German families
  41. Genomewide Scan in German Families Reveals Evidence for a Novel Psoriasis-Susceptibility Locus on Chromosome 19p13
  42. PERB11 (MIC): a polymorphic MHC gene is expressed in skin and single nucleotide polymorphisms are associated with psoriasis
  43. Promoter Polymorphism at –238 of the Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha Gene is Not Associated with Early Onset Psoriasis when Tested by the Transmission Disequilibrium Test
  44. Immunsystem Haut
  45. Association between interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) gene polymorphism and early and late-onset psoriasis
  46. Familial Juvenile Onset Psoriasis Is Associated with the Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) Class I side of the Extended Haplotype Cw6-B57-DRB1*0701-DQA1*0201-DQB1*0303: A Population- And Family-Based Study
  47. Analysis of TAP2 and HLA-DP gene polymorphism in Psoriasis
  48. Oligonucleotide Typing Reveals Association of Type I Psoriasis with the HLA-DRB1*0701/2, -DQA* 0201, -DQB1*0303 Extended Haplotype
  49. Type I and Type II psoriasis Show a Similar Usage of T-Cell Receptor Variable Regions