
Special Report: Overcoming Therapeutic Inertia and Communicating Safety of JAK Inhibitors
Healthcare providers discuss the importance of effective communication when switching patients from biologics to JAK inhibitors.
Episodes in this series

Therapeutic inertia is a recurrent challenge in the management of moderate to severe
Mona Shahriari, MD, suggests that inertia often stems from clinician comfort with “good enough,” time pressures, and residual uncertainty about newer therapeutic classes such as JAK inhibitors. She notes that until 2017 there were no targeted agents combining high levels of skin clearance with long-term safety suitable for chronic use, which shaped expectations for what was considered acceptable control. Now, with advanced biologics and JAK inhibitors available, she argues that continuing to prioritize convenience over optimal outcomes can inadvertently shortchange patients whose lives might be transformed by deeper disease control.
In this video, part of a
Mastro complements this with his “three Ps” framework—emphasizing that the situation in which the boxed warning arose is not the same person, problem, or prescription as the atopic dermatitis patient and agent under consideration. He briefly reviews the surveillance study that generated the warning, highlights differences in population and indication, and then explicitly explains why he believes those data do not directly translate to the current atopic dermatitis scenario. Both clinicians stress that these conversations can be conducted in 1 to 2 minutes yet have a profound impact on patient trust, adherence, and willingness to switch.
Relevant disclosures for Shahriari include AbbVie, Apogee, Arcutis, Bristol Myers Squibb, Dermavant, Galderma, Incyte, Johnson & Johnson, LEO, Lilly USA, Novartis, Regeneron, Sanofi-Genzyme, Takeda, UCB, Pfizer, and others. Mastro has no relevant disclosures to report.
References:
Silverberg JI, Gooderham M, Katoh N, et al. Combining treat-to-target principles and shared decision-making: International expert consensus-based recommendations with a novel concept for minimal disease activity criteria in atopic dermatitis. J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol. 2024;38(11):2139-2148. doi:
Silverberg JI, Bunick CG, Hong HC, et al. Efficacy and safety of upadacitinib versus dupilumab in adults and adolescents with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis: week 16 results of an open-label randomized efficacy assessor-blinded head-to-head phase IIIb/IV study (Level Up). Br J Dermatol. 2024;192(1):36-45. doi:












































































