Nail Psoriasis

Nail psoriasis affects up to 50% of patients with cutaneous psoriasis and is a strong risk factor for psoriatic arthritis (PsA). Matrix involvement causes pitting, leukonychia, crumbling; nail bed involvement causes onycholysis, oil-drop (salmon) patches, and subungual hyperkeratosis. Disease impacts function and quality of life. Therapy depends on severity, number of nails, and associated skin/PsA. Options range from topical high-potency steroids/vitamin D analogs to intralesional corticosteroids and systemic/biologic therapies that also address skin and joint disease.

Epidemiology and Associations

  • Occurs in all ages; more frequent and severe with longer psoriasis duration.
  • Strong association with enthesitis and distal interphalangeal (DIP) PsA; nail disease can precede joint symptoms.

Pathophysiology

  • Inflammation of nail matrix and bed related to psoriatic pathways (Th17/IL-23 axis).
  • Enthesis-organ concept: nail unit and DIP enthesis are anatomically/functional linked.

Clinical Features

  • Matrix signs: pitting (irregular, coarse), crumbling, Beau lines, leukonychia, red lunula.
  • Bed signs: oil-drop discoloration, onycholysis with erythematous rim, subungual hyperkeratosis, splinter hemorrhages.
  • Severity scoring: NAPSI (Nail Psoriasis Severity Index).

Differential Diagnosis

  • Onychomycosis, eczema, lichen planus (longitudinal ridging, pterygium), trauma, alopecia areata nails (regular pits), reactive arthritis, chronic paronychia.
  • Fungal coinfection is common; obtain KOH/culture/PAS before systemic therapy.

Management

  1. General measures
  • Keep nails short; avoid trauma/repetitive wet work; protective gloves; manage paronychia; treat coexistent tinea.
  1. Topical therapy (mild, few nails)
  • High-potency corticosteroids (clobetasol) solutions/ointments under occlusion; nail lacquers.
  • Vitamin D analogs (calcipotriol) alone or with steroids (weekend steroid/weekday calcipotriol).
  • Tazarotene 0.1% gel for pitting/onycholysis; combine with steroid to reduce irritation.
  • Tacrolimus 0.1% ointment for periungual dermatitis.
  1. Intralesional therapy (moderate, resistant few nails)
  • Triamcinolone acetonide 2.5–10 mg/mL injected into matrix or nail bed every 6–8 weeks; requires experience; pain mitigation with digital block/ice; monitor for atrophy.
  1. Phototherapy and devices
  • Targeted phototherapy (308 nm excimer) for periungual lesions; evidence modest.
  • Laser for onycholysis hyperkeratosis has limited data.
  1. Systemic therapy (moderate–severe nail disease, multiple nails, functional impairment, or concomitant skin/PsA)
  • Conventional: methotrexate, cyclosporine, acitretin (retinoid particularly for hyperkeratosis; teratogenic; mucocutaneous AEs).
  • Biologics with robust nail data:
    • Anti-TNF: adalimumab, infliximab, etanercept.
    • Anti-IL-17: secukinumab, ixekizumab, brodalumab.
    • Anti-IL-23: guselkumab, risankizumab, tildrakizumab.
    • JAK inhibitors (tofacitinib, upadacitinib) show benefits in PsA with nail involvement.
  • Choice guided by comorbidities, PsA presence, patient preference, and access.
  1. Monitoring and outcomes
  • Expect slow improvement due to nail growth: fingers ~6 months, toes 12–18 months.
  • Use NAPSI or photographic tracking; screen for PsA symptoms regularly (DIP pain, morning stiffness, swelling, dactylitis); refer to rheumatology when indicated.

Prognosis

  • Chronic with flares; significant improvements achievable with modern systemic/biologic therapy, especially when PsA is treated concurrently.
  • Recurrence with trauma (“Koebnerization”) common; maintenance needed.

References (recent guidelines and key reviews)

  • Nail psoriasis consensus and treatment algorithms, 2022–2024.
  • Biologic trials reporting NAPSI outcomes, 2021–2024.
  • Studies on nail–enthesis–PsA relationships, 2021–2024.

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