OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether low concentrated saline spa water baths followed by ultraviolet B (LC-SSW-UVB) are superior to UVB alone in moderate to severe psoriasis. BACKGROUND: There is a lack of sufficiently large randomized controlled clinical trial evaluating the additional benefit of saltwater baths followed by UVB compared to UVB only in psoriasis. STUDY DESIGN: Partly evaluator blind, multicentre, pragmatic, randomized controlled trial. SETTING:Five German spa centres. SUBJECTS:One hundred and forty-three adults with stable psoriasis during the last month and a Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) of > 10 and/or an affected body surface area of > 15%. INTERVENTIONS:LC-SSW-UVB or UVB thrice a week until remission (PASI < 5) or for a maximum of 6 weeks. Sodium chloride concentrations of natural springs varied between 4.5% and 12%. Conventional UVB (broadband UVB or selective UVB phototherapy) was used as irradiation source. MAIN OUTCOME: Reduction of PASI and/or affected body surface area of 50% at the end of the intervention period (PASI-50). Only participants receiving at least one intervention were included in the primary analysis. RESULTS: Patients allocated to LC-SSP-UVB attained a statistically significantly higher rate of PASI-50 at the end of the intervention period than patients allocated to UVB [58/79 (73%) vs. 32/64 (50%); P = 0.01; NNT, 4.3, 95% CI, 2.4-18.1]. Benefit persisted until 3 months only for one of two secondary outcomes considered. CONCLUSIONS: In routine clinical practice balneophototherapy using conventional UVB is superior to conventional UVB only at the end of a 6-week treatment course.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether low concentrated salinespawater baths followed by ultraviolet B (LC-SSW-UVB) are superior to UVB alone in moderate to severe psoriasis. BACKGROUND: There is a lack of sufficiently large randomized controlled clinical trial evaluating the additional benefit of saltwater baths followed by UVB compared to UVB only in psoriasis. STUDY DESIGN: Partly evaluator blind, multicentre, pragmatic, randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Five German spa centres. SUBJECTS: One hundred and forty-three adults with stable psoriasis during the last month and a Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) of > 10 and/or an affected body surface area of > 15%. INTERVENTIONS: LC-SSW-UVB or UVB thrice a week until remission (PASI < 5) or for a maximum of 6 weeks. Sodium chloride concentrations of natural springs varied between 4.5% and 12%. Conventional UVB (broadband UVB or selective UVB phototherapy) was used as irradiation source. MAIN OUTCOME: Reduction of PASI and/or affected body surface area of 50% at the end of the intervention period (PASI-50). Only participants receiving at least one intervention were included in the primary analysis. RESULTS:Patients allocated to LC-SSP-UVB attained a statistically significantly higher rate of PASI-50 at the end of the intervention period than patients allocated to UVB [58/79 (73%) vs. 32/64 (50%); P = 0.01; NNT, 4.3, 95% CI, 2.4-18.1]. Benefit persisted until 3 months only for one of two secondary outcomes considered. CONCLUSIONS: In routine clinical practice balneophototherapy using conventional UVB is superior to conventional UVB only at the end of a 6-week treatment course.
Authors: Ildikó Katalin Tefner; András Németh; Andrea Lászlófi; Tímea Kis; Gyula Gyetvai; Tamás Bender Journal: Rheumatol Int Date: 2011-09-27 Impact factor: 2.631
Authors: Frank Peinemann; Marco Harari; Sandra Peternel; Thalia Chan; David Chan; Alexander M Labeit; Thilo Gambichler Journal: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Date: 2020-05-05
Authors: Choong Gon Kim; Meehye Kang; Youn-Ho Lee; Won Gi Min; Yong Hwan Kim; Su Jin Kang; Chang Hyun Song; Soo Jin Park; Ji Ha Park; Chang Hyun Han; Young Joon Lee; Sae Kwang Ku Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med Date: 2015-06-16 Impact factor: 2.629