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Effects of six months treatment with liraglutide among patients with psoriasis and obesity, beyond metabolic control?

Med Clin (Barc) · 2025

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 48 patients with psoriasis and obesity, six months of treatment with liraglutide 3mg led to significant reductions in BMI (from 37.9 to 35), waist circumference (from 111.6 cm to 104.7 cm), and preperitoneal fat (from 1.6 cm to 1.2 cm). The treatment also improved psoriasis severity (PASI score from 12 to 4.3), pain (VAS score from 4.4 to 2.2), quality of life (DLQI score from 11.9 to 4.8), and depression scores (BDI from 15.5 to 7.6), alongside decreases in inflammatory markers like C-reactive protein and homocysteine.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalMed Clin (Barc), 2025
Citations2
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Obesity, Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Obesity and psoriasis are two closely related chronic diseases and share multiple comorbidities. The common etiopathogenic basis would be a low-grade chronic inflammation, with a cross talk between adipose tissue and the skin. Obesity in patients with psoriasis results in a worse prognosis of the lesions and reduces the effectiveness of treatment. OBJECTIVES: To assess the mid-term effect of liraglutide 3mg on anthropometric and morphofunctional, biochemical, and dermatological parameters in patients with psoriasis and obesity. MATERIAL AND METHODS: 48 patients were included (52.1%♀, age 48.7±11.8 years, BMI 37.9±5.6kg/m, psoriasis duration 17.8±11.1 years). The severity of the lesions was evaluated with the PASI (Psoriasis Area Severity Index) and the VAS (pain visual analog scale), and DLQI (Dermatology Quality Index) and the Beck depression test (BDI). Also, biochemical and anthropometric determinations were performed baseline and after 6 months. RESULTS: There was a reduction in BMI (37.9±5.6 vs 35±4.9; p<0.001), waist circumference (111.6±7 vs 104.7±9.3cm; p=0.001) and preperitoneal fat (1.6±0.6 vs 1.2±0.6cm; p<0.0001). PASI (12±8.4 to 4.3±2.9; p<0.0001), VAS (4.4±1.9 vs 2.2±1.6; p=0.003), DLQI (11.9±6.2 vs 4.8±3.4; p<0.0001) and BDI (15.5±3.6 vs 7.6±2.5; p<0.0001) improved significantly. C-reactive protein (3.9±3.1 vs 1.8±3.2mg/L; p<0.0001), homocysteine (13±3.3 vs 9.6±2.5μmol/L; p<0.0001), and plasma cortisol (12.5±4 vs 8.9±3.7μg/dL; p=0.001). In multiple regression analysis, dermatological improvement was independent of weight loss. CONCLUSIONS: Liraglutide exerts beneficial effects not only on BMI and visceral fat, but also reduces inflammatory parameters in patients with psoriasis and obesity, improving skin lesions and quality of life.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 40267547 ↗

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