| Literature DB >> 25793005 |
Tingting Zhou1, Peiru Zhou1, Hong Hua1, Xiaosong Liu1.
Abstract
Objective. To evaluate the beneficial effects and safety of corticosteroids combined with traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) for pemphigus. Methods. Seven electronic databases were searched to identify any potential randomized controlled trials (RCTs) or clinical controlled trials (CCTs) that compared corticosteroids with and without TCM for the treatment of pemphigus, published in any language. Remission of the mucocutaneous lesions, therapeutic duration, dosage of corticosteroids, and specific antibody titers were employed as the main outcome measures. The methodological quality of the included studies was assessed using the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Review of Interventions and Rev Man 5.1.0 software. Results. Four RCTs with a total of 199 patients were included in the present review. Management with corticosteroids combined with TCM seemed to benefit pemphigus patients in terms of healing of lesions, prevention of complications and relapse, and reduced interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) level. The trials were not of high methodological quality. No study mentioned allocation concealment and blinding. Only one trial reported adverse events, and it indicated that the safety of corticosteroids combined with TCM was uncertain. Conclusion. There is some, albeit weak, evidence to show that combined treatment with corticosteroids with TCM could be of benefit for some patients with pemphigus. The efficacy and safety of this combined treatment should be evaluated further in better designed, fully powered, and confirmatory RCTs.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25793005 PMCID: PMC4352514 DOI: 10.1155/2015/815358
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1Study selection process.
Quality assessment of included randomized controlled trials.
| Study | Random sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Blinding of participants and personnel | Blinding of outcome assessment | Incomplete outcome data | Selective reporting | Other bias | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Uncertain | Uncertain | Low bias | Low bias | Low bias | Uncertain | Uncertain | Unclear risk of bias |
| [ | Uncertain | Uncertain | Low bias | Low bias | Low bias | Uncertain | Uncertain | Unclear risk of bias |
| [ | Low bias | Uncertain | Low bias | Low bias | Low bias | Uncertain | Uncertain | Unclear risk of bias |
| [ | Uncertain | Uncertain | Low bias | Low bias | Low bias | Uncertain | Uncertain | Unclear risk of bias |
Figure 2The Cochrane Collaboration's tool for assessing risk of bias.
| Study | Authors | Year | Article source | Type of study | Sample size | Diagnosis standard |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Li and Liang | 2009 | CJCM2009 Vol. (1) | RCT | 29/27 | Clinical manifestation histopathology and DIF |
| [ | Chen and Xu | 2007 | Journal of New Chinese Medicine, January 2007 VoI. 39 No.1 | RCT | 32/29 | Clinical manifestation histopathology and DIF |
| [ | Luo et al. | 2003 | Journal of Clinical Dermatology, 2003; 32(1): 38–41. | RCT | 20/20 | Clinical manifestation histopathology and DIF |
| [ | Wang et al. | 2009 | Journal of China Traditional Chinese Medicine Information, April 2009, Vo1. 1 No. 2 | RCT | 22/20 | Clinical manifestation histopathology and immunopathology |
| Study | Intervention | |
|---|---|---|
| Treatment | Control | |
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| [ | (White atractylodes rhizome, raw Gordon euryale seed, cortex phellodendri, | Oral administration of prednisone. |
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| [ | Pemphigus I (Copitidis rihizoma, radix scutellariae, cortex phellodendri, | Glucocorticoids only |
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| [ | Tonifying kidney herb (Liuweidihuang pill) combined small doses of corticosteroids for maintenance treatment. | Only small doses of corticosteroids for maintenance treatment |
| Study | Treatment course | Outcome measure | Complications | Follow-up | Adverse event | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical standards | Laboratory standards | |||||
| [ | More than six months | ① The regression of the blister, fever, and the causalgiar, ② the treatment time, ③ relapse | No | Gastric ulcer, fungal infection, and osteoporosis | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
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| [ | Two months | ① The regression of the blister, ② the dosage of corticosteroids | No | No | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
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| [ | Not mentioned | (1) The time used when the lesion was controlled, | The titer of the antibodies and the level of IL-10, IFN- | No | Not mentioned | One patient with subtotal gastrectomy experienced diarrhea. |
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| [ | 14 days as one course of treatment, just one course every month | The lesion control rate (patients in stable condition and regressed) | No | Osteoporosis, hypertension, diabetes, and peptic ulcer | Two years | Not mentioned |