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Semaglutide therapy decreases epicardial fat inflammation and improves psoriasis severity in patients affected by abdominal obesity and type-2 diabetes.

Alexis Elias MalavazosChiara MeregalliFabio SorrentinoAndrea VignatiCarola DubiniValentina ScravaglieriSara BasilicoFederico BoniardiPietro SpagnoloPiergiorgio MalagoliPaolo RomanelliFrancesco SecchiGianluca Iacobellis
Published in: Endocrinology, diabetes & metabolism case reports (2023)
Psoriasis patients affected by obesity and type-2 diabetes (T2D) are often resistant to biologic therapies. Psoriasis is often associated with abdominal obesity, T2D, and cardiovascular diseases (CVD), given their shared inflammatory properties and pathogenic similarities. Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) inflammation can cause the distinctive pattern of CVD seen in psoriasis. EAT and pericoronary adipose tissue (PCAT) attenuation, assessed by routine coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA), can be used as biomarkers of inflammation and allow monitoring of medical anti-inflammatory therapies. The actions of semaglutide to reduce energy intake, improve glycemic control, and produce effective weight loss, particularly at the visceral fat depot level, can diminish adipose tissue dysfunction, reduce EAT attenuation and PCAT attenuation of the right coronary artery (RCA) and concomitantly ameliorate the clinical severity of psoriasis. Semaglutide therapy may be considered in psoriasis patients affected by T2D and abdominal obesity, despite low cardiovascular risk by traditional risk scores, who are resistant to biologic therapies.
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