Authors
Angad Arinder Chadha
Published in
Case reports in dermatology. Volume 18. Issue 1. Pages 363-371. Epub Apr 30, 2026.
Abstract
This case report describes the clinical course and treatment of generalized pustular psoriasis (GPP) flare with intravenous (i.v.) spesolimab, an anti-IL-36R antibody, and subsequent long-term disease management with subcutaneous (s.c.) spesolimab.
A 72-year-old female patient had an ongoing GPP flare for 1 month before presenting to the hospital for flare and related multiorgan failure. She was successfully treated with 2 infusions of 900 mg i.v. spesolimab 1 week apart. She then initiated therapy with 300 mg s.c. spesolimab every 4 weeks for the long-term treatment of GPP. Rapid and significant improvement of skin and systemic symptoms was observed within 1 week of receiving i.v. spesolimab. However, the severity of the patient's prolonged flare deteriorated her functional status, and she required rehabilitation post-discharge. At follow-ups, s.c. spesolimab demonstrated favorable efficacy and tolerability, with no flare recurrence. Mild superficial desquamation reappeared in the days before consecutive spesolimab doses, with complete skin recovery achieved post-dose.
This case underscores the serious complications arising from untreated flare and the need for long-term management of chronic GPP. The patient's ongoing post-flare symptoms highlight the chronicity of GPP, and continuous targeted treatment with spesolimab improved both her symptoms and quality of life.
PMID:
42396388
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 03 Jul 2026.
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