Improving Cardiometabolic Outcomes in the Psoriasis Cohort
Access status:
Open Access
Type
ThesisThesis type
Doctor of PhilosophyAuthor/s
Smith, Annika DanielleAbstract
Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease increasingly recognised as a systemic condition linked with elevated cardiometabolic risk. Despite strong evidence connecting psoriasis with adverse cardiovascular outcomes, this risk remains under-recognised in routine practice. ...
See morePsoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease increasingly recognised as a systemic condition linked with elevated cardiometabolic risk. Despite strong evidence connecting psoriasis with adverse cardiovascular outcomes, this risk remains under-recognised in routine practice. This thesis addresses key knowledge and practice gaps among clinicians and patients, evaluates the cardiometabolic impact of systemic therapies, and tests a behavioural intervention designed to improve cardiovascular risk management in people with psoriasis. The thesis incorporates peer-reviewed publications, including narrative and systematic reviews, retrospective cohort studies, cross-sectional surveys, and a randomised controlled trial. Early chapters examine clinician and patient perspectives, revealing limited awareness and suboptimal screening. Subsequent chapters report real-world analyses of biologic therapies and a systematic review and meta-analysis of major adverse cardiovascular events. A concise overview of systemic treatments highlights the limited evidence guiding therapy selection from a cardiovascular standpoint. The final component presents the TEXTME PSO trial, which tested a mobile health intervention to support lifestyle modification and self-management. Baseline analyses and user feedback illustrate opportunities for patient-centred care and inform future prevention strategies. Collectively, this work provides a multidimensional understanding of the psoriasis–cardiovascular disease interface, offering new insights into education, therapeutic impact, and prevention. The findings highlight the need for improved clinician education, routine cardiovascular risk assessment in dermatology, and scalable, patient-centred interventions for this high-risk population.
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See morePsoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease increasingly recognised as a systemic condition linked with elevated cardiometabolic risk. Despite strong evidence connecting psoriasis with adverse cardiovascular outcomes, this risk remains under-recognised in routine practice. This thesis addresses key knowledge and practice gaps among clinicians and patients, evaluates the cardiometabolic impact of systemic therapies, and tests a behavioural intervention designed to improve cardiovascular risk management in people with psoriasis. The thesis incorporates peer-reviewed publications, including narrative and systematic reviews, retrospective cohort studies, cross-sectional surveys, and a randomised controlled trial. Early chapters examine clinician and patient perspectives, revealing limited awareness and suboptimal screening. Subsequent chapters report real-world analyses of biologic therapies and a systematic review and meta-analysis of major adverse cardiovascular events. A concise overview of systemic treatments highlights the limited evidence guiding therapy selection from a cardiovascular standpoint. The final component presents the TEXTME PSO trial, which tested a mobile health intervention to support lifestyle modification and self-management. Baseline analyses and user feedback illustrate opportunities for patient-centred care and inform future prevention strategies. Collectively, this work provides a multidimensional understanding of the psoriasis–cardiovascular disease interface, offering new insights into education, therapeutic impact, and prevention. The findings highlight the need for improved clinician education, routine cardiovascular risk assessment in dermatology, and scalable, patient-centred interventions for this high-risk population.
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Date
2025Licence
The author retains copyright of this thesisRights statement
The author retains copyright of this thesis. It may only be used for the purposes of research and study. It must not be used for any other purposes and may not be transmitted or shared with others without prior permission.Faculty/School
Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney School of Public HealthDepartment, Discipline or Centre
Westmead Clinical SchoolAwarding institution
The University of SydneyShare