INTRODUCTION
Can modern, simple, and ubiquitous information and communication technologies (ICTs), such as smartphones and tablets, be useful conduits in physician-patient discourse? ICTs are accepted by patients and physicians for reasons of convenience, cost, promoting patient empowerment, and the potential for augmenting adherence. However, rapid acceptance of such “new and cool†technologies begets asking a fundamental clinical question: do patients and dermatologists “see†the same thing when communicating about that individual patient’s own personal skin disease? An individual’s health literacy, disease severity, past experiences, and underlying emotional or psychosocial factors may influence how patients feel about their disease and, therefore, affect how they communicate about symptoms with their dermatologists.
A pilot exploratory study was conducted to investigate the use of a simplified, patient-friendly tablet-based numeric rating scale to assess investigator- and subject-assessed improvements in signs and symptoms of a plaque psoriasis target lesion under treatment with clobetasol propionate 0.05% spray (CPS). Topical corticosteroids are the foundation of treatment for the majority of patients as most respond effectively and safely to topical corticosteroids.1 CPS has demonstrated efficacy and safety in clinical trials comprising over 2,200 subjects.2,3 The well documented and accepted known clinical response to CPS made it a suitable choice to investigate the use of a new ICT tool.
METHODS
This was a prospective, open-label, single arm, single-site clinical study. Men and women who were at least 18 years old with a diagnosis of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis affecting up to 20% of the body surface area (BSA) were eligible for enrollment. Subjects who were on medications for their plaque psoriasis, including biologics, were allowed to enroll.
Subjects applied CPS to a target lesion measuring at least 1cm x 1cm twice daily for 2 weeks. Subjects were allowed to apply study drug to non-target lesions as well. Subjects who were on concomitant topical medications were allowed to apply their current treatment on other lesions; only CPS was applied to the target lesion.
This study was not powered and did not have a primary efficacy endpoint. The assessment scales and tablet application used