Building an Atopic Dermatitis Plan Patients Can Follow
About this video
Safety, monitoring, and shared decision-making across biologic and adjunctive care
Integrative care in atopic dermatitis (AD) is not only about what clinicians may add to the treatment plan. It’s about how those recommendations are evaluated, monitored, and shaped around the person expected to follow them.
In the final installment of this Topical Conversations series, Cynthia Trickett, PA-C, and Peter Lio, MD, turn to the practical responsibilities that come with combining adjunctive strategies and biologic therapy. Dr Lio discusses the long-term safety experience with biologics while emphasizing the importance of continuing to watch emerging signals with appropriate humility. The same caution extends to supplements, where ingredient quality, contamination, counterfeit products, and inconsistent manufacturing can make a seemingly straightforward recommendation far more complicated. When he does recommend a supplement, he tries to be highly specific about the brand and supplier.
The conversation then moves from safety to sustainability. Gentle cleansing, regular moisturizing, reducing environmental irritants, sleep, nutrition, and movement may all support care, but only when they fit the patient’s life. A recommendation that is unaffordable, intolerable, inaccessible, or unrealistic is unlikely to succeed, no matter how sound it appears on paper.
That reality also shapes follow-up. Dr Lio describes checking in early with patients who have more severe disease and using the Atopic Dermatitis Control Tool to move beyond a general sense of “better” toward a more structured assessment of whether the disease is truly controlled. Those conversations may reveal that a treatment was never received, not covered, caused stinging or burning, or simply did not fit into the patient’s routine.
Ultimately, the episode returns to the foundation of integrative care: listening. “The goal is to get you better,” Dr Lio says. That means giving patients options, inviting them to guide the plan, and remaining flexible enough to adjust when one approach does not fit. Integrative care enhances biologic therapy rather than replacing it, creating a broader and more individualized path toward control.