Prednisolone vs. ciclosporin for severe adult eczema. An investigator-initiated double-blind placebo-controlled multicentre trial.

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Prednisolone vs. ciclosporin for severe adult eczema. An investigator-initiated double-blind placebo-controlled multicentre trial. / Schmitt, J; Schäkel, K; Fölster-Holst, R; Bauer, A; Oertel, R; Augustin, Matthias; Aberer, W; Luger, T; Meurer, M.

in: BRIT J DERMATOL, Jahrgang 162(3), 2010, S. 661-668.

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@article{01e85a95657f47ada9cda67e870c8027,
title = "Prednisolone vs. ciclosporin for severe adult eczema. An investigator-initiated double-blind placebo-controlled multicentre trial.",
abstract = "Summary Background Patients with severe eczema frequently receive systemic glucocorticosteroids. The efficacy of prednisolone and other steroids, however, has never been evaluated appropriately. A meta-analysis indicated that ciclosporin is the best evaluated systemic treatment for eczema. Objectives To investigate the comparative efficacy of prednisolone and ciclosporin for severe eczema. Methods In an investigator-initiated double-blind randomized multicentre trial, adults with severe eczema (objective SCORAD >/= 40 and Dermatology Life Quality Index >/= 10) were randomly allocated to receive prednisolone (initial dose 0.5-0.8 mg kg(-1) daily) for 2 weeks followed by placebo for 4 weeks or ciclosporin (2.7-4.0 mg kg(-1) daily) for 6 weeks and followed for another 12 weeks. Concomitant treatment included a moderately potent topical steroid, emollients, and continuation of antihistamines. Primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with stable remission, i.e. >/= 50% SCORAD improvement under active treatment and no flare (>/= 75% of baseline SCORAD) during follow-up. Sample size calculation indicated that 66 patients were needed to see clinically relevant differences between groups. Analysis was by intention-to-treat (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00445081). Results Because of unexpectedly high numbers of withdrawals due to significant exacerbations of eczema (n = 15/38) an independent data monitoring and safety board proposed early study termination. Thirty-eight patients were randomized and analysed. Stable remission was achieved in one of 21 patients receiving prednisolone compared with six of 17 patients treated with ciclosporin (P = 0.031). Conclusions Ciclosporin is significantly more efficacious than prednisolone for severe adult eczema. Despite its frequent use in daily practice, prednisolone is not recommended to induce stable remission of eczema.",
author = "J Schmitt and K Sch{\"a}kel and R F{\"o}lster-Holst and A Bauer and R Oertel and Matthias Augustin and W Aberer and T Luger and M Meurer",
year = "2010",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "162(3)",
pages = "661--668",
journal = "BRIT J DERMATOL",
issn = "0007-0963",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Prednisolone vs. ciclosporin for severe adult eczema. An investigator-initiated double-blind placebo-controlled multicentre trial.

AU - Schmitt, J

AU - Schäkel, K

AU - Fölster-Holst, R

AU - Bauer, A

AU - Oertel, R

AU - Augustin, Matthias

AU - Aberer, W

AU - Luger, T

AU - Meurer, M

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - Summary Background Patients with severe eczema frequently receive systemic glucocorticosteroids. The efficacy of prednisolone and other steroids, however, has never been evaluated appropriately. A meta-analysis indicated that ciclosporin is the best evaluated systemic treatment for eczema. Objectives To investigate the comparative efficacy of prednisolone and ciclosporin for severe eczema. Methods In an investigator-initiated double-blind randomized multicentre trial, adults with severe eczema (objective SCORAD >/= 40 and Dermatology Life Quality Index >/= 10) were randomly allocated to receive prednisolone (initial dose 0.5-0.8 mg kg(-1) daily) for 2 weeks followed by placebo for 4 weeks or ciclosporin (2.7-4.0 mg kg(-1) daily) for 6 weeks and followed for another 12 weeks. Concomitant treatment included a moderately potent topical steroid, emollients, and continuation of antihistamines. Primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with stable remission, i.e. >/= 50% SCORAD improvement under active treatment and no flare (>/= 75% of baseline SCORAD) during follow-up. Sample size calculation indicated that 66 patients were needed to see clinically relevant differences between groups. Analysis was by intention-to-treat (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00445081). Results Because of unexpectedly high numbers of withdrawals due to significant exacerbations of eczema (n = 15/38) an independent data monitoring and safety board proposed early study termination. Thirty-eight patients were randomized and analysed. Stable remission was achieved in one of 21 patients receiving prednisolone compared with six of 17 patients treated with ciclosporin (P = 0.031). Conclusions Ciclosporin is significantly more efficacious than prednisolone for severe adult eczema. Despite its frequent use in daily practice, prednisolone is not recommended to induce stable remission of eczema.

AB - Summary Background Patients with severe eczema frequently receive systemic glucocorticosteroids. The efficacy of prednisolone and other steroids, however, has never been evaluated appropriately. A meta-analysis indicated that ciclosporin is the best evaluated systemic treatment for eczema. Objectives To investigate the comparative efficacy of prednisolone and ciclosporin for severe eczema. Methods In an investigator-initiated double-blind randomized multicentre trial, adults with severe eczema (objective SCORAD >/= 40 and Dermatology Life Quality Index >/= 10) were randomly allocated to receive prednisolone (initial dose 0.5-0.8 mg kg(-1) daily) for 2 weeks followed by placebo for 4 weeks or ciclosporin (2.7-4.0 mg kg(-1) daily) for 6 weeks and followed for another 12 weeks. Concomitant treatment included a moderately potent topical steroid, emollients, and continuation of antihistamines. Primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with stable remission, i.e. >/= 50% SCORAD improvement under active treatment and no flare (>/= 75% of baseline SCORAD) during follow-up. Sample size calculation indicated that 66 patients were needed to see clinically relevant differences between groups. Analysis was by intention-to-treat (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00445081). Results Because of unexpectedly high numbers of withdrawals due to significant exacerbations of eczema (n = 15/38) an independent data monitoring and safety board proposed early study termination. Thirty-eight patients were randomized and analysed. Stable remission was achieved in one of 21 patients receiving prednisolone compared with six of 17 patients treated with ciclosporin (P = 0.031). Conclusions Ciclosporin is significantly more efficacious than prednisolone for severe adult eczema. Despite its frequent use in daily practice, prednisolone is not recommended to induce stable remission of eczema.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 162(3)

SP - 661

EP - 668

JO - BRIT J DERMATOL

JF - BRIT J DERMATOL

SN - 0007-0963

ER -