1.
The addition of topical calcipotriol to phototherapy enhance the efficacy of treatment in patients with vitiligo: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
Hu, M, Liao, K, Lei, W, Zhang, R, Tu, C
International immunopharmacology. 2021;:107910
Abstract
BACKGROUND Treatment of vitiligo has several challenges. Phototherapy and topical calcipotriol have been reported to be effective in combination with other therapies, but there is no consensus on the combination use. OBJECTIVE To perform a systematic review and meta-analysis that elucidates the efficacy of the combination of phototherapy and topical calcipotriol. METHODS This systematic review was performed by searching PubMed, EMBASE, Web of Science, Cochrane Library databases, Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), WanFang and VIP databases for relevant publications till February 28, 2021. Relative risk (RR) and its 95% confidence interval (CI) were used to evaluate the data. Bias assessment, heterogeneity and sensitivity analysis were conducted in this meta-analysis. RESULTS After screening, nine studies with 700 participants were included. The meta-analysis indicated that the combination of phototherapy and topical calcipotriol showed significantly higher effective rate (RR 1.11, 95% CI 1.02-1.22; p < 0.05) and apparent effective rate (RR 1.35, 95% CI 1.15-1.59; p < 0.01) than phototherapy monotherapy in the treatment of vitiligo. In addition, the side effects were minor, transient and tolerable. CONCLUSIONS This meta-analysis provides evidence supporting phototherapy combined with topical calcipotriol as a valuable treatment modality for patients with vitiligo, which has better efficacy than monotherapy.
2.
Oral isotretinoin for treating mucocutaneous human papillomavirus infections: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
Yang, TH, Lee, TH, Huang, YC
Indian journal of dermatology, venereology and leprology. 2019;(6):569-577
Abstract
INTRODUCTION Some viral warts are refractory to treatment, some others tend to recur. Oral isotretinoin is useful against warts to varying degrees. OBJECTIVE To determine the efficacy of oral isotretinoin for treating mucocutaneous human papillomavirus infections. METHODS A systematic review and meta-analysis of studies published from the date of inception of the databases to December 30, 2017 were conducted. Randomized controlled trials or case series with ≥10 patients with mucocutaneous human papillomavirus infection who had received oral isotretinoin treatment were analyzed. The meta-analysis estimated the pooled odds ratio and pooled response rate. RESULTS The review included eight studies. Trials of oral isotretinoin versus placebo treatment revealed that isotretinoin effectively treated mucocutaneous human papillomavirus infections (odds ratio: 43.8, 95% confidence interval: 9.7-198.8). The pooled estimate of the complete response rate of oral isotretinoin to mucocutaneous human papillomavirus was 67.7% (95% confidence interval: 49.5-81.7%). Another pooled estimation revealed that 83.9% (95% confidence interval: 59.7-94.9%) of patients exhibited at least 50% lesion clearance, whereas 12.3% with complete response experienced recurrence. LIMITATIONS This meta-analysis had a small sample size and high inter-study heterogeneity. CONCLUSION Oral isotretinoin is superior to placebo for treating mucocutaneous human papillomavirus infections, particularly plane warts. The recurrence rate and risk of severe side effects are low.
3.
Systemic therapies of pityriasis rubra pilaris: a systematic review.
Kromer, C, Sabat, R, Celis, D, Mössner, R
Journal der Deutschen Dermatologischen Gesellschaft = Journal of the German Society of Dermatology : JDDG. 2019;(3):243-259
Abstract
Pityriasis rubra pilaris (PRP) is a rare papulosquamous disorder. Treatment is challenging; the armamentarium consists of topical corticosteroids, phototherapy, classic systemic treatments such as retinoids or immunosuppressive drugs, and most recently biologicals. However, the relative effectiveness of therapies is unclear. Our objective was to review the published literature on systemic treatment of PRP. A systematic review was conducted on PubMed and the Cochrane Library up to 5 September 2017. Studies evaluating any systemic treatments of PRP (except for historical treatments) were included. Overall, 182 studies met the predefined inclusion criteria, and reported on 475 patients and 652 courses of treatment. 42.0 % (225/514) of all patients treated with retinoids achieved an excellent response (isotretinoin: 61.1 % [102/167], etretinate: 47 % [54/115], and acitretin: 24.7 % [43/174]) compared to an excellent response rate of 33.1 % (53/160) with methotrexate. Therapy with biologicals was successful in 51.0 % of patients (71/133) (ustekinumab: 62.5 % [10/16], infliximab: 57.1 % [28/49], etanercept: 53.3 % [16/30], and adalimumab: 46.4 % [13/28]). This review balances effectiveness, side effects, experience, and drug costs in order to suggest a treatment regimen starting with isotretinoin as first-line, methotrexate as second-line and biologicals as third-line treatment for this difficult-to-treat dermatosis.