| Literature DB >> 24004561 |
Ramiro Dip1, James Carmichael, Ingrid Letellier, Guenther Strehlau, Elizabeth Roberts, Emmanuel Bensignor, Wayne Rosenkrantz.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A randomized, unmasked, multicenter study was conducted to evaluate the rate of pruritus reduction and improvement in clinical scoring by cyclosporine A (5 mg/kg orally, once daily for 28 days) either alone (n = 25 dogs) or with concurrent prednisolone (1 mg/kg once daily for 7 days, followed by alternate dosing for 14 days; n = 23 dogs) for the treatment of atopic dermatitis in dogs. Dogs were included in the study after exclusion of other causes of pruritic dermatitis, and were assessed by dermatologists on days 0, 14 ± 1 and 28 ± 2. Assessments included: general physical examination, CADESI-03 lesion scoring, overall clinical response, evaluation of adverse events (AEs), body weight and clinical pathology (hematology, clinical chemistry and urinalysis). Owner assessments, including pruritus (visual analogue scale, VAS) and overall assessment of response were conducted every 3-4 days, either during visits to the clinic or at home. Owners reported AEs to the investigator throughout the study.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24004561 PMCID: PMC3847128 DOI: 10.1186/1746-6148-9-173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Prohibited concomitant medications
| ● Any antibiotic | ● Topical corticosteroids |
| ● Drugs interfering with CsA such as ketoconazole, itraconazole, miconazole, phenobarbital. | |
| ● Cylosporine A | ● Systemic short acting glucocorticosteroids, including ophthalmic and otic preparations |
| ● Antihistamines | ● Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) |
| ● Topical calcineurin inhibitors | ● Shampoos (except where the same treatment regimen is maintained throughout the study). |
| ● Vaccination | ● Clomipramine, amitriptyline and fluoxetine and any other serotonin reuptake inhibitor |
| ● Allergen specific immunotherapy (except if initiated for at least 9 months and where the same treatment regimen is maintained throughout the study). | |
| ● Treatment with systemic long-acting corticosteroids within the last 3 months | |
| ● Essential fatty acids except those used before study initiation for at least 57 days and where the same treatment regime is maintained throughout the study | |
Figure 1Study design. Dogs were included in the study on day 0 and received one daily treatment with cyclosporine A (Atopica®, 5 mg/kg) from day 1 to day 28. In addition dogs in the cyclosporine A and prednisolone group received 1 mg/kg prednisolone once daily, on the indicated days (arrows). Grey boxes represent clinic visit windows (day 14 ± 1 and day 28 ± 2) and stars represent owner assessment time points.
Efficacy end-points
| Pruritus (Primary endpoint) | Pruritus VAS | 0 = “my dog is not itchy: no scratching, chewing, rubbing or licking observed” |
| 100 = “my dog is extremely itchy: scratching, chewing, rubbing or licking constantly” | ||
| Individual pruritus observations on VAS at any time were expressed as a percentage: | ||
| Overall assessment of clinical response | Score | [0] |
| [1] | ||
| [2] | ||
| [3] | ||
| Overall assessment of clinical response | Score | [0] |
| [1] | ||
| [2] | ||
| [3] | ||
| CADESI-03 | Score | Completion of validated template grading erythema, lichenification, excoriations, alopecia and the sum score for all four lesions at 62 body sites (grades, none: 0; 1: mild; 2, 3: moderate; 4, 5: severe)
[ |
Figure 2Reduction of pruritus. Mean percentage reduction in pruritus as assessed by the owner for dogs treated with cyclosporine A (▲) or with cyclosporine A and prednisolone (○). Bars indicate 95% confidence interval. At every time point after day 0 differences between both groups were statistically significant with the exception of day 28 ± 2 (). Pruritus assessment by the owner at every time point was significantly lower than baseline for both treatment groups, with the exception of day 3 for the cyclosporine group (1, p = 0.3583).
Owner-reported pruritus VAS scores and reduction from baseline following treatment
| 0 | Cyclosporine A | 79.28 | 80.58 | 12.45 | 52.60 | 98.92 | ||
| Cyclosporine A and prednisolone | 73.90 | 73.12 | 11.83 | 50.75 | 100.00 | |||
| 3-4 | Cyclosporine A | 77.43 | 79.03 | 11.42 | 48.50 | 95.02 | −1.18 (−7.8,5.5) | 0.0008 |
| Cyclosporine A and prednisolone | 47.65 | 50.00 | 22.86 | 10.95 | 96.79 | −36.33 (−48.7,-24.0) | ||
| 7-8 | Cyclosporine A | 67.79 | 69.65 | 14.62 | 38.71 | 95.02 | −13.04 (−22.3,-3.8) | 0.0008 |
| Cyclosporine A and prednisolone | 29.21 | 29.50 | 20.46 | 1.99 | 72.04 | −60.61 (−73.3,-47.9) | ||
| 10-11 | Cyclosporine A | 65.81 | 67.99 | 13.47 | 36.56 | 87.06 | −15.31 (−24.2,-6.5) | 0.0008 |
| Cyclosporine A and prednisolone | 23.08 | 16.13 | 22.97 | 0.00 | 74.63 | −68.73 (−82.7,-54.7) | ||
| 14 ± 1 | Cyclosporine A | 58.69 | 57.53 | 18.03 | 26.87 | 93.03 | −24.57 (−34.9,-14.2) | 0.0008 |
| Cyclosporine A and prednisolone | 20.37 | 12.90 | 20.22 | 0.00 | 75.62 | −72.79 (−84.4,-61.1) | ||
| 17-18 | Cyclosporine A | 50.45 | 47.54 | 19.71 | 20.40 | 88.56 | −34.62 (−47.0,-22.3) | 0.0008 |
| Cyclosporine A and prednisolone | 19.33 | 10.75 | 19.50 | 0.00 | 70.00 | −73.57 (−84.9,-62.3) | ||
| 21-22 | Cyclosporine A | 48.33 | 47.79 | 20.26 | 16.13 | 88.56 | −37.00 (−50.1,-23.9) | 0.0128 |
| Cyclosporine A and prednisolone | 21.23 | 11.29 | 24.84 | 0.00 | 84.58 | −70.55 (−85.5,-55.6) | ||
| 24-25 | Cyclosporine A | 43.69 | 42.36 | 24.29 | 3.23 | 88.56 | −42.41 (−58.2,-26.6) | 0.0240 |
| Cyclosporine A and prednisolone | 19.90 | 10.75 | 24.42 | 0.00 | 93.03 | −73.10 (−86.9,-59.3) | ||
| 28 ± 2 | Cyclosporine A | 43.44 | 43.01 | 25.09 | 3.23 | 89.05 | −42.36 (−58.2,-26.5) | 0.2160 |
| Cyclosporine A and prednisolone | 26.26 | 15.05 | 28.54 | 0.00 | 94.03 | −65.12 (−81.1,-9.1) | ||
n = 21; arithmetic mean; s.d. standard deviation.
Figure 3Owner overall assessment of clinical response. Percentage of poor, moderate, good and excellent responders among dogs treated with cyclosporine A (C) or cyclosporine A and prednisolone (CP) as assessed by the owner at the different observation dates. *: p ≤ 0.05 (Fisher's Exact, two-tailed).
Overall clinical response: number (and percentage) of poor, moderate, good and excellent responders as assessed by the investigator
| 14 ± 1 | Poor | 4 (18.2) | 1 (4.5) | 0.0330 |
| Moderate | 9 (40.9) | 5 (22.7) | ||
| Good | 8 (36.4) | 8 (36.4) | ||
| Excellent | 1 (4.5) | 8 36.4) | ||
| 28 ± 2 | Poor | 4 (20) | 2 (9.1) | 0.4655 |
| Moderate | 3 (15) | 2 (9.1) | ||
| Good | 11 (55) | 12 (54.5) | ||
| Excellent | 2 (10) | 6 (27.3) | ||
n = 20 for this treatment on day 28 ± 2.
CADESI-03 scores for the 4 lesions evaluated and sum of all scores by day of evaluation and treatment group
| Erythema | 0 | 43.27 (29.8) | 49.36 (26.81) | 0.1185 |
| 14 ± 1 | 27.14 (22.61) | 20.36 (21.97) | ||
| 28 ± 2 | 23.62 (33.17) | 19.95 (19.47) | ||
| Lichenification | 0 | 17.23 (18.29) | 23.23 (21.8) | 0.6708 |
| 14 ± 1 | 8.41 (9.03) | 8.18 (11.17) | ||
| 28 ± 2 | 6.86 (8.03) | 9.55 (16.49) | ||
| Excoriations | 0 | 12.82 (15.53) | 16.95 (17.61) | 0.2552 |
| 14 ± 1 | 4.36 (5.92) | 4.05 (8.85) | ||
| 28 ± 2 | 3.71 (5.44) | 7.27 (16.67) | ||
| Alopecia | 0 | 20.00 (28.46) | 20.32 (15.33) | 0.1590 |
| 14 ± 1 | 13.14 (14.27) | 7.95 (10.17) | ||
| 28 ± 2 | 6.38 (6.79) | 9.45 (15.30) | ||
| Sum of scores | 0 | 93.32 (64.75) | 109.86 (67.39) | 0.0750 |
| | 14 ± 1 | 53.05 (37.39) | 40.55 (43.59) | |
| 28 ± 2 | 40.57 (46.61) | 46.23 (63.24) | ||
*RMANCOVA analysis for the interaction of the variables treatment group and length of treatment.
n = 21 for this treatment on day 28 ± 2.
Figure 4Investigator assessment of skin lesions. Sum of CADESI-03 scores, normalized. Mean and 95% confidence interval are presented for each evaluation day). *: p ≤ 0.05 at day 14 ± 1 and 28 ± 2 for both treatment groups against baseline (Wilcoxon paired sample test).
Clinical signs reported and number of dogs affected per treatment group
| Digestive tract disorders | 20 (14) | 12 (8) | 0.1810 |
| Abdominal pain | 1 | 0 | 0.3589 |
| Digestive tract hypermotility | 0 | 1 | 0.3169 |
| Flatulence | 1 | 1 | 0.9762 |
| Diarrhea | 5 (5) | 7 (6) | 0.5815 |
| Stomatitis | 0 | 1 | 0.3169 |
| Vomiting | 13 (10) | 2 (2) | |
| Renal and urinary disorders | 4 (3) | 7 (5) | 0.3726 |
| Cystitis | 0 | 2 (2) | 0.1441 |
| Polyuria | 1 | 2 (2) | 0.5223 |
| Uremia | 0 | 1 | 0.3169 |
| Urinary incontinence | 1 | 0 | 0.3589 |
| Urine abnormalities | 2 (2) | 2 (2) | 0.9485 |
| Skin and appendages disorders | 10 (8) | 3 (3) | 0.1080 |
| Bacterial skin infection | 1 | 1 | 0.9762 |
| Dermatitis | 0 | 1 | 0.3169 |
| Erosion | 0 | 1 | 0.3169 |
| Fungal skin infection | 1 | 0 | 0.3589 |
| Papilloma | 1 | 0 | 0.3589 |
| Pruritus | 1 | 0 | 0.3589 |
| Pyoderma | 6 | 0 | |
| Systemic disorders | 2 (2) | 13 (8) | |
| Abnormal test result | 1 | 3 (3) | 0.2717 |
| Anorexia | 0 | 1 | 0.3169 |
| Lethargy | 0 | 4 (4) | |
| Polydipsia | 1 | 4 (4) | 0.1384 |
| Pyrexia | 0 | 1 | 0.3169 |
| Others | | | |
| Hyperactivity | 1 | 0 | 0.3589 |
| Tachypnea | 1 | 1 | 0.9762 |
| Musculoskeletal disorder | 1 | 0 | 0.3589 |
| Acid–base disorder | 0 | 1 | 0.3169 |
| Conjunctivitis | 2 (2) | 1 | 0.6226 |
| Otitis externa | 2 (2) | 0 | 0.1798 |
*Several AEs had more than one clinical sign; total number of clinical signs reported: 81.
1The numbers in parentheses indicate the number of dogs showing the corresponding clinical sign. Dogs may have had more than one AE.