Showing 3571-3580 of 5016 results for "".
- South Beach Symposium: Dr. Neal Neal Bhatia Maps a Fragmented but Promising Pipelinehttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/south-beach-symposium-dr-neal-neal-bhatia-maps-a-fragmented-but-promising-pipeline/2485624/At the 2026 South Beach Symposium, Neal Bhatia, MD, FAAD, delivered a wide-ranging and opinionated overview of the current dermatology therapeutic landscape, arguing that Innovation is uneven across disease states and increasi
- Study: Upadacitinib Reduces Inflammation Markers in ADhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/study-upadacitinib-reduces-inflammation-markers-in-ad/2485380/Upadacitinib (UPA) treatment was associated with significant reductions in biomarkers of systemic inflammation in adults with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis (AD), according to a poster presented at Winter Clinical 2026 in Hawaii.
- Smoking, PROs, and Attrition May Skew HS Study Outcomes: Commentaryhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/smoking-pros-and-attrition-may-skew-hs-study-outcomes/2484927/A letter to the editor published in JAAD provided commentary and presented additional opportunities for further research on adalimumab and the effects of smoking on patient response while treating hidradenitis suppurativa (HS).
- Tralokinumab Maintains Efficacy in Hand AD Through 32 Weekshttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/tralokinumab-maintains-efficacy-in-hand-ad-through-32-weeks/2484484/LEO Pharma has announced positive 32-week topline results from its ADHAND trial, a phase 3b study evaluating tralokinumab in adults with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis (AD) with hand involvement. According to a press rele
- Bimekizumab Maintains Flare Control in HS Through 2 Yearshttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/bimekizumab-maintains-flare-control-in-hs-through-2-years/2484119/Bimekizumab provides sustained control of disease flares in patients with moderate-to-severe hidradenitis suppurativa (HS), with more than 83% of patients remaining flare-free over 96 weeks, according to interim results from the BE HEARD EXT study presented by Dr. H
- Analysis: Ceramide Skincare from Birth May Mitigate Pediatric ADhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/analysis-ceramide-skincare-from-birth-may-mitigate-pediatric-ad/2483872/A new consensus paper offers clinical recommendations to address the complex interplay of skin barrier dysfunction and SAIGE (Staphylococcus aureus colonization, immunologic, genetic, and environmental) factors in pediatric atopic dermatitis (AD).
- From EADV: Povorcitinib Maintains Efficacy Through 24 Weeks in STOP-HS Programhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/from-eadv-povorcitinib-maintains-efficacy-through-24-weeks-in-hs-phase-3-data/2483429/New 24-week results from the phase 3 STOP-HS trial program suggest that investigational oral JAK1 inhibitor povorcitinib provided sustained clinical benefits in adults with moderate to severe hidradenitis suppurativa (HS), according to findings presented at the 2025
- Analysis: IL-17, JAK Inhibitors May Carry Elevated Risk for TBhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/analysis-il-17-jak-inhibitors-may-carry-elevated-risk-for-tb/2483387/A large population-based analysis using data from TriNetX suggests a elevated risk of active tuberculosis (TB) in patients treated with systemic immunosuppressive therapies (including IL-17, IL-23, IL-12/23, Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors), cyclosporine, and tumor ne
- Study: Many May Avoid Cancer Treatment Due to Skin Side Effectshttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/study-one-third-may-avoid-cancer-treatment-due-to-skin-side-effects/2476010/A new pilot survey revealed that dermatologic side effects (DSEs) from anti-cancer therapies (ACTs) are widely misunderstood and could influence treatment decisions among patients in underserved communities. Researchers from th
- Assessment Tool Combination Reveals Higher AD Risk and Atopic March Progressionhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/assessment-tool-combination-reveals-higher-ad-risk-and-atopic-march-progression/2474810/Children with Staphylococcus aureus (SA) detected by metagenomic sequencing, as well as culture-based methods, had worse atopic dermatitis (AD) outcomes, new study results suggest. Des