The 2026 Elevate Derm Rapids Conference brought together some of the brightest minds in dermatology to discuss where the field is heading.
Victoria Garcia Albea, a dermatology NP, sat down with Dr. Jason Hawkes from Oregon to discuss the latest clinical science. From the hidden cells driving chronic disease to groundbreaking oral peptides and the reality of GLP-1s in skin health, here are the major breakthroughs shifting the dermatology landscape.
Ever wonder why a patient’s psoriasis plaques keep reappearing on the exact same elbows or knees, or why a fixed drug reaction strikes the identical spot every time?
The answer lies in Resident Memory T Cells.
The Takeaway: To achieve true, long-term disease remission, future therapies will need to move beyond general immune suppression and directly target these stubborn, tissue-resident memory cells.
For years, the systemic dermatology conversation was polarized: you either chose a highly effective but expensive injectable biologic or an oral small-molecule option that was easier to take but often had more side effects or lower efficacy.
Enter Icotrokinra, a new oral small peptide targeting the IL-23 receptor.
| Feature | Biologics | Small Molecules | Oral Peptides (e.g., Icotrokinra) |
| Route | Injection / IV | Oral Pill | Oral Pill (or dissolvable) |
| Targeting | Extracellular only (Sniper-like) | Intracellular (Broad, less precise) | Intracellular & Extracellular (High surface area) |
| Metabolism | Immune system breakdown | Liver (High drug interactions) | Kidneys / Feces (No liver metabolism) |
| Efficacy | High | Variable / Lower | High (Biologic-level efficacy) |
With the explosion of GLP-1 receptor agonists for weight loss, the intersections between obesity, metabolic syndrome, and psoriasis are becoming impossible to ignore.
While GLP-1 receptors are highly expressed within psoriatic plaques, science suggests they aren't the primary drivers of the skin disease itself. Instead, the connection is deeply systemic. Pediatric data show that over 90% of children with a strong family history of psoriasis develop obesity before their skin lesions manifest.
Dr. Hawkes notes that while the dermatology specialty doesn't necessarily need to manage every comorbidity, providers shouldn't shy away from the conversation.
"I don't think it's any harder than medications like cyclosporine, methotrexate, or acitretin. These are pretty straightforward medications."
— Dr. Jason Hawkes
If a patient with severe psoriasis lacks a primary care provider to manage their metabolic risks, initiating GLP-1 therapy or using teledermatology networks can bridge a critical gap in holistic patient care.
The innovation pipeline is moving toward exceptionally long half-lives—potentially reducing dosing schedules to just once a year. While a "once-a-year psoriasis shot" sounds ideal, it introduces unique clinical hurdles:
The days of choosing blindly between Drug A, B, or C are over. As dermatology therapeutics become more sophisticated, clinicians must master the underlying basic science to navigate shared decision-making effectively.
We might not have a Matrix-style plug to download this data directly into our brains yet, but staying engaged with the latest clinical trials ensures patients get the personalized, cutting-edge care they deserve.
Listen to the entire podcast on Apple Podcasts or Spotify