| Literature DB >> 28191040 |
Justin Parker1, Rolf Scharfbillig1, Sara Jones1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Xerosis, literally dryness of the skin, of the foot is a common condition encountered clinically, which can lead to discomfort and predisposition to infection. Currently, there are no evidence-based recommendations on which moisturiser formulations best alleviate xerotic symptoms. The aim of this review was to guide clinical practice in the treatment of primary and diabetes related foot xerosis, by identifying from the existing literature the most effective ingredient or formulation of topical treatments for symptoms of primary foot xerosis in the general population.Entities:
Keywords: Dermatology therapy; Diabetes complications; Emollients
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28191040 PMCID: PMC5297015 DOI: 10.1186/s13047-017-0190-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Foot Ankle Res ISSN: 1757-1146 Impact factor: 2.303
Examples of common active ingredients in respective categories
| Humectants | Occlusives | Emollients | Rejuvenators |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glycerin | Lanolin | Petrolatum | Collagen |
| Urea | Paraffin | Vegetable oil | Keratin |
| Ammonium lactate | Petrolatum | Dimethicone | Elastin |
| Gelatin | Cholesterol | Propylene glycol | |
| Hyaluronic acid | Stearyl alcohol | Castor oil |
Fig. 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta – Analyses (PRISMA) diagram
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for article search result
| Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|
| Experimental, quantitative study design | Xerosis in area other than foot/ft |
PICO format clinical question
| Population | General population and diabetics with foot xerosis |
| Intervention | Topical moisturisers |
| Comparator | Other moisturisers, placebo, no treatment |
| Outcome | Clinical scoring, instrumental measures |
Fig. 2Medline search strategy
Fig. 3Epidemiological Appraisal Instrument (EAI) scores of study methodological quality
Characteristics of included studies (listed in chronological order)
| Study | NHMRC Level | Population | Sample Size (n male) | Intervention/active ingredients tested | Study duration | Outcome measurements | Inclusion Criteria | Study results | Mean values/Effect size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nash [ | IV | M/F, 12 – 87 years | 75 (NR) | 20% urea cream | 7 months | Clinical scoring | UTD | Significant improvement after treatment | N/A |
| Hopp and Sundberg [ | III-1 | M/F, 60 + yrs | 60 (NR) | Alpha-Keri (oil) vs Keri-lotion ® (both containing lanolin, mineral oil and emulsifiers) vs water soak vs control | 12 days | Questionnaire, | UTD | Water soak + Keri-lotion was superior to other combinations | Mean difference |
| Brenner [ | IV | M/F, 53 – 97 years | 10 (7) | 12% ammonium lactate | 14 days | 7-point Dry Skin Grading Scale | UTD | Significant improvement after treatment | N/A |
| Siskin et al. [ | III-2 | Sex NR, 24 – 85 years | 55 (NR) | 12% ammonium lactate vs no therapy | 8 weeks | Overall Dryness Severity Score, | ≥ Moderate bilateral dryness | 12% ammonium lactate superior to no treatment | Mean difference 0.98 ( |
| Jennings et al. [ | III-3 | M/F, 22 – 86 years | 70 (34) | 5% salicylic acid + 10% urea vs 12% ammonium lactate | 28 days | Xerosis severity scale, | Mild-moderate bilateral xerosis | No significant difference between treatments | Mean difference 0.1 ( |
| Uy et al. [ | III - 2 | Sex NR, 13 – 72 years | 57 (NR) | 12% ammonium lactate vs liposome – based emollients (petrolatum, paraffin) | 28 days | Clinical grading scores | ≥ Moderate bilateral dryness and/or hyperkeratosis | No significant difference between treatments | N/A |
| Ademola et al. [ | III-2 | M/F, 18 – 65 years | 25 (NR) | 40% urea cream vs 12% ammonium lactate | 28 days | Evapirometer (roughness), | ≥ Grade 2 xerosis | 40% urea cream superior | Effect size 0.19 (95% CI: −0.47 to 0.84) |
| Jennings et al. [ | III-3 | M/F, 26 – 83 years | 35 (10) | 10% lactic acid vs 12% ammonium lactate | 28 days | Xerosis severity scale, | Mild-moderate bilateral xerosis | No significant difference between treatments, patients preference for 10% lactic acid | Mean difference 0.1 ( |
| Pham et al. [ | III-2 | M/F, age NR | 40 (22) | 10% urea + 4% lactic acid vs placebo vehicle | 28 days | Xerosis Assessment Scale | ≥18 years | 10% urea + 4% lactic acid superior to placebo vehicle | N/A |
| Baird [ | III-3 | M/F, age NR | 30 (14) | 10% urea cream vs 25% urea cream | 6 weeks | Customised equipment measuring skin electrical resistance | Type 1 or 2 diabetes | 25% urea cream superior to 10% urea cream | Effect size 0.27 (95% CI: −0.24 to 0.78) |
| Jennings et al. [ | III-3 | M/F, 18 + yrs | 41 (NR) | Lanolin cream vs 12% ammonium lactate | 28 days | Xerosis severity scale, | Moderate-severe bilateral xerosis | No significant difference between treatments | N/A |
| Baker and Rayman [ | III-3 | M/F, 40 – 74 years | 26 (12) | 10% urea foam vs ‘patient’s regular creams’ (aqueous cream, Diprotobase and Unguentum) | 14 days | 5-point scale for dryness, flexibility and callus formation | Type 1 or 2 diabetes | 10% urea foam superior to patient’s existing creams | Effect size −2.33) (95% CI: −2.99 to −1.59) |
| Quatrezoos | III-2 | Female, 55 – 62 years | 30 (0) | Chitlin – Glucan vs placebo vehicle + glycerol | 35 days | Moisture Accumulation Test (MAT) | Menopausal women | Chitlin-Glucan superior to placebo vehicle, equal result to glycerol yet longer-lasting | Mean difference of 60 points |
| De Soca and De Atencio [ | IV | M/F, 20 – 50 year | 40 (NR) | 10% urea cream | 28 days | Clinical scoring, | 20 – 50 yo | Significant improvement after treatment | Mean difference of 5.4 |
| Baalham et al. [ | III-3 | Female, age NR | 15 (0) | Paraffin vs Paraffin + 10% urea | 14 days | Digital moisture monitor | Adult | Paraffin + 10% urea superior | Effect size 0.87 (95% CI: 0.1 to 1.59) |
| Garrigue et al. [ | III-2 | M/F, 18 – 75 years | 54 (24) | Pedimed ® (urea, lactic acid, paraffin) vs placebo vehicle | 28 days | Xerosis Assessment Score (XAS), | M / F | Pedimed ® superior to placebo vehicle | 18% difference between groups ( |
| Grossman et al. [ | IV | M/F, 41 – 70 year | 12 (6) | 35% urea foam | 28 days | Clinical grading score, | ≥18 years | Significant improvement after treatment | N/A |
| Papanas et al. [ | III-2 | M/F, age NR | 20 (10) | 10% urea foam vs no treatment | 14 days | Corneometer | Type 2 diabetes | 10% urea foam was superior to no treatment | Effect size 1.25 (95% CI: 0.55 to 1.9) |
| Ciammaichella et al. [ | III-2 | M/F, age NR | 54 (29) | 5% urea cream vs no treatment | 28 days | Microangiopathy, | Diabetes - Insulin treated | 5% urea cream superior to no treatment | N/A |
| Dykes [ | III-3 | Female, 22 – 64 years | 25 (0) | 25% urea cream vs unspecified urea cream | 14 days | Clinical photo scores, | 18+ years old | 25% urea cream more effective than unspecified urea cream | Effect size −0.26 (95% CI: −0.83 to 0.35) |
| Federici, Federici and Milani [ | III-2 | M/F, 40 – 75 years | 40 (16) | Urea, arginine and carnosine cream vs glycerol cream | 28 days | Dryness Area Severity Index (DASI score), | 40 – 75 years | Urea, arginine and carnosine cream superior | Mean difference −0.8 |
| Loden, von Scheele and Michelsen [ | III-3 | M/F, 21 – 86 years | 50 (25) | 15% alphahydroxy acid + 15% urea cream vs healthy controls | 14 days | Trans-epidermal water loss (TEWL), | UTD | 15% alphahydroxy acid + 15% urea significantly improved skin condition in both symptomatic and healthy samples | N/A |
III-2 comparative study with concurrent controls, III-3 comparative study without concurrent controls, IV case series with either post-test or pre-test/post-test outcomes (as per [15]); NR not reported, n sample size, yrs years, UTD unable to determine, n sample size; M male; F female, VAS visual analogue scale; CI confidence interval