| Literature DB >> 25604924 |
Arnd Jacobi1, Anke Mayer, Matthias Augustin.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Psoriasis is a common chronic disease with significant impairment in quality of life. As there is no cure, it often requires lifelong disease control to minimize the development of skin lesions and to relieve symptoms. The aim of this publication is to systematically review the role of currently used emollients and keratolytics in the treatment of psoriasis.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25604924 PMCID: PMC4374065 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-015-0068-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Main objectives of using keratolytics in psoriasis
| Main objectivesa |
| • Softening/hydration of the stratum corneum |
| • Desquamation of hyperkeratotic skin |
| • Relieve of pruritus/discomfort |
| • Barrier repair |
| • Penetration enhancement of topically applied anti-psoriatic drugs/ultraviolet radiation during phototherapy |
aCited according to published reviews [3, 4, 6, 21–23]
Efficacy and safety of emollients in clinical trials
| References | Intervention | Treatment duration | Population | Study design | Results | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| van Duijnhoven et al. [ | 50% cremorlanette I in vaselinum album | 2 weeks | 5 patients with psoriasis | Non-comparative study | Normalization of proliferation and differentiation markers; slight improvement compared to baseline | None reported |
| Rim et al. [ | Pseudoceramide (myristyl/palmityloxostearamide/arachamidemonoethanolamine) | 6 weeks | 17 patients with psoriasis | Controlled study (vs. untreated lesions) | Improved visual assessment of skin dryness, significantly increased electrical capacitance; decreased TEWL | Mild pruritus in one patient |
| Pauporte et al. [ | Combination of peanut and mineral oil | 3 weeks | 89 patients with moderate to severe scalp psoriasis | Randomized, controlled, double-blind study (vs. 0.01% fluocinoloneacetonide) | Improvement of all signs of psoriasis compared to baseline ( | Treatment-related folliculitis in one patient |
| Tanghetti et al. [ | Combination of tazarotene with an emollient (not further specified) | 12 weeks | 1,393 patients with plaque psoriasis | Observational study | Enhanced efficacy of tazarotene; increased patients satisfaction | None reported |
| Watsky et al. [ | Combination of 0.05% betamethasone dipropionate and a water-in-oil based moisturizing cream or lotion (not further specified) | 4 weeks | 96 patients with chronic plaque-type psoriasis | Controlled, open label study (twice daily vs. once daily) | Once-daily application was equivalent in efficacy to twice-daily application and significantly better than once-daily application of betamethasone alone (both | None reported |
| Singh et al. [ | Combination of 0.05% betamethasone dipropionate twice daily in propylene glycol | 9 days | 36 patients with psoriasis | Randomized, controlled, double-blind study (vs. once-daily betamethasone) | No difference compared to once-daily betamethasone regarding erythema, scaling, induration and LPSI | None reported |
LPSI Local Psoriasis Severity Index, tewl transepidermal water loss
Efficacy and safety of urea in clinical trials
| References | Intervention | Treatment duration | Population | Study design | Results | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gip et al. [ | 12% urea and 12% sodium chloride | 3 weeks | 30 patients with psoriasis | Controlled double-blind study (vs. vehicle) | No statistical differences on severity parameters such as scaling, erythema and infiltration compared to vehicle | Burning sensation in two patients |
| Fredriksson et al. [ | 12% urea and 12% sodium chloride | 1 week | 40 patients with psoriasis | Controlled study (vs. vehicle) | Statistically significant improvement in scaling compared to vehicle | None reported |
| Hagemann and Proksch [ | 10% urea | 2 weeks | 10 patients with psoriasis | Randomized, controlled, double-blind study (vs. vehicle and vs. untreated site) | Reduction of the clinical psoriasis severity scores of scaling (−60%) and induration (−32%; | None reported |
| Lakshimi and Bhaskaran [ | 10% plain urea gel or 5% urea niosomal gel | 12 weeks | 40 adult patients with stable plaque psoriasis involving <25% of the body surface area or palmoplantar psoriasis | Double-blind placebo controlled study | The niosomal urea gel produced greater reduction in total score and desquamation score compared to the plain gel and placebo ( | None reported |
| Shemer et al. [ | Combination of 40% urea and 1% bifonazole | 2 weeks | 52 patients with psoriasis capitis; 19 patients with scalp seborrheic dermatitis | Non-comparative, open-label study | Improvement in 100% of patients with complete healing in 73.2% compared to baseline | None reported |
| Taube et al. [ | Combination of 1% dithranol and 10% urea (after 2 days of pre-treatment with 5% salicylic acid) | 7 weeks | 57 patients with psoriasis vulgaris | Controlled case study (vs. dithranol alone) | Significantly shortened mean treatment duration until complete resolution of 3.5 weeks compared to 4.2 weeks in the dithranol only group | None reported |
| Vena et al. [ | Combination of 2% urea [betamethasone dipropionate and calcipotriol for 4 weeks followed by calcipotriol alone or with urea (2% and 4%; once daily each)] | 4 + 8 weeks | 313 adult patients with psoriasis vulgaris | Multicenter open study | After the 8-week maintenance treatment phase, the clinical score for erythema, scaling, infiltration and pruritus improved in both groups, with a tendency towards a greater reduction of infiltration in those treated with urea. A greater percentage of patients concomitantly treated with urea (47%) than those treated with calcipotriol (33%) judged the efficacy as excellent | Burning sensation in two patients |
Efficacy and safety of AHA and PHA in clinical trials
| References | Intervention | Treatment duration | Population | Study design | Results | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Berardesca et al. [ | 15% glycolic acid | 15 days | 12 patients with psoriasis | Controlled study (vs. 0.05% betamethasone valerate) | Significantly decreased TEWL and Laser Doppler values; reduction in hyperkeratosis and erythema compared to baseline being equivalent to that after 0.05% betamethasone valerate | None reported |
| Akamine et al. [ | 15% AHAs (lactic acid, mandelic acid and gycolic acid) and 5% PHAs (gluconolactone and maltobionic acid) | 2 weeks | 25 patients with moderate, chronic, plaque psoriasis | Randomized, controlled, double-blind study (vs. 6% salicylic acid) | Significant improvement in scaling, erythema, induration and, Investigator global assessment, compared to baseline | Mild adverse events assessed as not related in five patients |
| Kostarelos et al. [ | Combination of 10% glycolic acid and 0.1% betamethasone | 8 weeks | 20 patients with scalp and seborrhoeic psoriasis | Controlled, double-blind study (vs. betamethasone alone) | Reduced duration of treatment to approximately half compared to treatment with betamethasone alone, 8 out of 13 of the treated sites healed completely compared to 3 out of 12 with betamethasone only | None reported |
AHA alpha-hydroxy acid, PHA poly-hydroxy acid, TEWL transepidermal water loss
Efficacy and safety of salicylic acid in clinical trials
| References | Intervention | Treatment duration | Population | Study design | Results | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kircik [ | 6% salicylic acid | 4 weeks | 10 patients with scalp psoriasis | Non-comparative, open-label, pilot study | Significant decrease in PSSI score from 15.3 to 3.0 compared to baseline ( | None reported |
| Akamine et al. [ | 6% salicylic acid | 2 weeks | 25 patients with moderate, chronic, plaque psoriasis | Randomized, controlled, double-blind study | Significant improvement in scaling, erythema, induration and investigator global assessment compared to baseline | Mild adverse events assessed as not related in five patients |
| Going et al. [ | 6% salicylic acid | 3 and 6 weeks | 30 patients with moderate or severe scalp psoriasis | Randomized, controlled study | 65–90% of patients improved regarding scaling and percentage of affected area compared to baseline; scaling scores for out-patients improved from 7.0 to 4.5 at 6 weeks ( | Dryness and stinging in six patients; irritation in three patients |
| Elie et al. [ | Combination of 2% salicylic acid and 0.05% betamethasone dipropionate lotion | 21 days | 40 patients with erythematous squamous dermatoses of the scalp including 22 patients with moderate to severe psoriasis | Randomized, controlled study | Reduction of mean total disease sign scores for scaling after 14 and 21 days ( | None reported |
| Nolting and Hagemeier [ | Combination of 2% salicylic acid and 0.05% betamethasone dipropionate solution | 3 weeks | 100 patients ( | Randomized, controlled study | More rapid onset of action and a more rapid clearing of scaling, pruritus and inflammation; decreased pruritus (100% vs. 76%) with betamethasone dipropionate alone | None reported |
| Tiplica and Salavastru [ | Combination of 5% salicylic acid and 0.1% mometasonefuroate ointment | 7 days | 359 patients with | Randomized, controlled, open-label study | Significantly greater reduction in PASI score ( | Skin irritation in one patient |
| Katz et al. [ | Combination of 5% salicylic acid and 0.1% mometasonefuroate ointment | 3 weeks | 341 patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis | Randomized, controlled study | Significant improvement in total disease sign scores on day 15 ( | Application-site reactions such as burning, pruritus and skin atrophy in 20% of patients vs. 13% with mometasonefuroate alone |
| Koo et al. [ | Combination of 5% salicylic acid and 0.1% mometasonefuroate ointment | 3 weeks | 408 patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis vulgaris | Randomized, controlled study | Significant improvement of the investigators’ global evaluation of overall clinical response at days 15 and 22 ( | Application-site reactions in 9% of patients vs. 8% with mometasonefuroate alone |
DLQI Dermatology Life Quality Index, PASI Psoriasis Area Severity Index, PSSI Psoriasis Scalp Severity Index