OBJECTIVE: Two 26-week US clinical trials of identical design were conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of pimecrolimus (Elidel, SDZ ASM 981) cream 1% in pediatric atopic dermatitis (AD). A secondary aim of both trials, and the focus of this article, was to evaluate the quality-of-life (QoL) impact of pimecrolimus compared with its vehicle. METHODS: A 6-week randomized, double-blind treatment phase was followed by a 20-week open-label phase during which all patients received pimecrolimus (403 patients 2 to 17 years old with mild to moderate AD; 267 randomized topimecrolimus and 136 to vehicle). QoL analyses were conducted on the intention-to-treat data and included patients 8 years old or younger. QoL was evaluated with the Parent's Index of Quality of Life in Atopic Dermatitis (PIQoL-AD) at baseline, 6 weeks, and 6 months. The PIQoL-AD is a 28-item measure completed by the parents of children with AD (0 to 8 years old). RESULTS:PIQoL-AD scores were available for 241 cases at baseline (158 pimecrolimus, 83 vehicle), 193 at 6 weeks (132 pimecrolimus, 61 vehicle), and 161 at 6 months (113 pimecrolimus, 48 vehicle). Improvement in parents' QoL was seen for both groups between baseline and 6 weeks and 6 months. Analysis of covariance on PIQoL-AD scores at 6 weeks showed statistically significant superiority of pimecrolimus compared with vehicle. After all patients were switched to receive pimecrolimus at week 6, mean PIQoL-AD scores were the same across both groups at 6 months. Positive but low levels of association were observed between changes in PIQoL-AD scores and changes in severity of AD (Investigator's Global Assessment and parent-perceived severity of pruritus). CONCLUSION: The results showed that pimecrolimus had a beneficial effect on parents' QoL in pediatric AD.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: Two 26-week US clinical trials of identical design were conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of pimecrolimus (Elidel, SDZ ASM 981) cream 1% in pediatric atopic dermatitis (AD). A secondary aim of both trials, and the focus of this article, was to evaluate the quality-of-life (QoL) impact of pimecrolimus compared with its vehicle. METHODS: A 6-week randomized, double-blind treatment phase was followed by a 20-week open-label phase during which all patients received pimecrolimus (403 patients 2 to 17 years old with mild to moderate AD; 267 randomized to pimecrolimus and 136 to vehicle). QoL analyses were conducted on the intention-to-treat data and included patients 8 years old or younger. QoL was evaluated with the Parent's Index of Quality of Life in Atopic Dermatitis (PIQoL-AD) at baseline, 6 weeks, and 6 months. The PIQoL-AD is a 28-item measure completed by the parents of children with AD (0 to 8 years old). RESULTS:PIQoL-AD scores were available for 241 cases at baseline (158 pimecrolimus, 83 vehicle), 193 at 6 weeks (132 pimecrolimus, 61 vehicle), and 161 at 6 months (113 pimecrolimus, 48 vehicle). Improvement in parents' QoL was seen for both groups between baseline and 6 weeks and 6 months. Analysis of covariance on PIQoL-AD scores at 6 weeks showed statistically significant superiority of pimecrolimus compared with vehicle. After all patients were switched to receive pimecrolimus at week 6, mean PIQoL-AD scores were the same across both groups at 6 months. Positive but low levels of association were observed between changes in PIQoL-AD scores and changes in severity of AD (Investigator's Global Assessment and parent-perceived severity of pruritus). CONCLUSION: The results showed that pimecrolimus had a beneficial effect on parents' QoL in pediatric AD.
Authors: William Abramovits; Mark Boguniewicz; Amy S Paller; Diane L Whitaker-Worth; Mary M Prendergast; Michael Tokar; Kuo B Tong Journal: Pharmacoeconomics Date: 2005 Impact factor: 4.981
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Authors: Stephen P McKenna; Diane Whalley; Abigail L Dewar; Ruud A M Erdman; Thomas Kohlmann; Mauro Niero; Eva Baró; Sharon A Cook; Beatrice Crickx; Feride Frech; Daniel van Assche Journal: Qual Life Res Date: 2005-02 Impact factor: 4.147
Authors: Mirella De Civita; Dean Regier; Abul H Alamgir; Aslam H Anis; Mark J Fitzgerald; Carlo A Marra Journal: Pharmacoeconomics Date: 2005 Impact factor: 4.981
Authors: Stephen P McKenna; Lynda C Doward; David M Meads; Alan Tennant; Gemma Lawton; Jens Grueger Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes Date: 2007-07-27 Impact factor: 3.186