Chronic prurigo: current insights and future directions

Chronic prurigo (CPG), particularly prurigo nodularis, is a highly burdensome skin disease that is characterized by the presence of chronic pruritus and hyperkeratotic, pruriginous papules and nodules. CPG demands accurate diagnostic and individualized therapeutic strategies. Clinically, CPG is prim...

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Main Authors: Lea-Sophie Stahl, Sonja Ständer, Claudia Zeidler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2025-05-01
Series:Journal of the Egyptian Women’s Dermatologic Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/jewd.jewd_58_24
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author Lea-Sophie Stahl
Sonja Ständer
Claudia Zeidler
author_facet Lea-Sophie Stahl
Sonja Ständer
Claudia Zeidler
author_sort Lea-Sophie Stahl
collection DOAJ
description Chronic prurigo (CPG), particularly prurigo nodularis, is a highly burdensome skin disease that is characterized by the presence of chronic pruritus and hyperkeratotic, pruriginous papules and nodules. CPG demands accurate diagnostic and individualized therapeutic strategies. Clinically, CPG is primarily diagnosed through physical examination, assessing the quantity and severity by using validated tools like the Prurigo Activity and Severity score and the Investigator’s Global Assessment. Further diagnosis includes an assessment of the lesion type, underlying causes, comorbidities, and potential systemic issues through additional radiological diagnostics. Therapeutically, CPG requires a multimodal strategy that is tailored to patient-specific, individual factors. Besides therapy, options like topical treatments and phototherapy and systemic therapies like small molecules and biologics offer significant clinical improvements. Currently, dupilumab is the only Food and Drug Administration and europäische arzneimittelagentur-approved systemic treatment for adult chronic nodular prurigo patients. Emerging therapies include monoclonal antibodies like nemolizumab and vixarelimab and Janus Kinase inhibitors like ruxolitinib and tofacitinib, showing promising results in clinical trials enhancing the quality of life for affected patients. This review aims to highlight that ongoing research is focused on expanding the range of validated diagnostic tools and the spectrum of approved therapy options and discuss historical and modern research trends.
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institution Kabale University
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spelling doaj-art-69e4c6e9d6994e60a0f571cbe94ca40b2025-08-20T03:26:00ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsJournal of the Egyptian Women’s Dermatologic Society2090-25652025-05-012229910510.4103/jewd.jewd_58_24Chronic prurigo: current insights and future directionsLea-Sophie StahlSonja StänderClaudia ZeidlerChronic prurigo (CPG), particularly prurigo nodularis, is a highly burdensome skin disease that is characterized by the presence of chronic pruritus and hyperkeratotic, pruriginous papules and nodules. CPG demands accurate diagnostic and individualized therapeutic strategies. Clinically, CPG is primarily diagnosed through physical examination, assessing the quantity and severity by using validated tools like the Prurigo Activity and Severity score and the Investigator’s Global Assessment. Further diagnosis includes an assessment of the lesion type, underlying causes, comorbidities, and potential systemic issues through additional radiological diagnostics. Therapeutically, CPG requires a multimodal strategy that is tailored to patient-specific, individual factors. Besides therapy, options like topical treatments and phototherapy and systemic therapies like small molecules and biologics offer significant clinical improvements. Currently, dupilumab is the only Food and Drug Administration and europäische arzneimittelagentur-approved systemic treatment for adult chronic nodular prurigo patients. Emerging therapies include monoclonal antibodies like nemolizumab and vixarelimab and Janus Kinase inhibitors like ruxolitinib and tofacitinib, showing promising results in clinical trials enhancing the quality of life for affected patients. This review aims to highlight that ongoing research is focused on expanding the range of validated diagnostic tools and the spectrum of approved therapy options and discuss historical and modern research trends.https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/jewd.jewd_58_24chronic prurigochronic prurituscurrent clinical trialsprurigo nodularisscratchingtherapy options
spellingShingle Lea-Sophie Stahl
Sonja Ständer
Claudia Zeidler
Chronic prurigo: current insights and future directions
Journal of the Egyptian Women’s Dermatologic Society
chronic prurigo
chronic pruritus
current clinical trials
prurigo nodularis
scratching
therapy options
title Chronic prurigo: current insights and future directions
title_full Chronic prurigo: current insights and future directions
title_fullStr Chronic prurigo: current insights and future directions
title_full_unstemmed Chronic prurigo: current insights and future directions
title_short Chronic prurigo: current insights and future directions
title_sort chronic prurigo current insights and future directions
topic chronic prurigo
chronic pruritus
current clinical trials
prurigo nodularis
scratching
therapy options
url https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/jewd.jewd_58_24
work_keys_str_mv AT leasophiestahl chronicprurigocurrentinsightsandfuturedirections
AT sonjastander chronicprurigocurrentinsightsandfuturedirections
AT claudiazeidler chronicprurigocurrentinsightsandfuturedirections