Plain-English translation of NCT07187817 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
Read our Psoriasis research guide →This study looks at medical records from people with psoriasis who have been treated with biologic medications—powerful drugs that calm the immune system to reduce skin symptoms. Researchers want to understand how well these treatments work when patients use them one after another, and whether later treatments are just as effective as earlier ones.
When a psoriasis treatment stops working, doctors switch to a different one. This study exists to find out whether switching treatments multiple times reduces how well they work, or if patients can keep getting good results even after trying several medications.
You likely qualify if…
You likely don't qualify if…
You won't need to do anything—the researchers will review your existing medical records from your dermatology clinic visits. They'll look at how your skin improved (or didn't) with each medication you've tried, and collect this information anonymously into a secure database. No extra visits, tests, or changes to your treatment are needed.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 2, 2026 · Not medical advice
United Kingdom
Collaborators
University of Bath, University of Leeds
Enrollment target
~366 participants
Started
October 2025
Primary completion
May 2026
This trial's estimated completion date has passed — the record may not be fully up to date.
Age range
18 Years and older
Last updated on clinicaltrials.gov in February 2026.
Reach out to the team running this trial. Response times vary — some teams are faster than others.
Central contact
Charlotte Gollins
Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust
Tell us you're interested and we'll help connect you with the research team. We'll walk you through what to expect first — no email needed to get started.