| Literature DB >> 29033598 |
Nupur U Patel1, Kayla Felix1, Danielle Reimer1, Steven R Feldman1,2,3.
Abstract
While topical medications remain the cornerstone of the psoriasis treatment paradigm, they also come with the risk of multiple side effects. An alternative topical treatment option, calcipotriene or calcipotriol, is a vitamin D derivative that is thought to work by inhibiting keratinocyte proliferation and enhancing keratinocyte differentiation. Multiple studies have demonstrated its efficacy and safety in improving psoriasis when used in combination with topical corticosteroids. Given the effectiveness and side effect profile seen with this combination of topical steroid and calcipotriene, the US Food and Drug Administration approved a calcipotriene/betamethasone dipropionate product for use in psoriasis patients over the age of 12 in 2006. Our paper seeks to review clinical trial evidence of this combination medication and its use in the treatment of psoriasis vulgaris. While assessment of available evidence indicates that the topical medication is both safe and effective for the treatment of psoriasis vulgaris, addressing limitations of what is known, such as tolerability, adherence, and patient preference, of this combination drug in future high-impact studies is needed.Entities:
Keywords: betamethasone diproprionate; calcipotriene; psoriasis; steroids; topical treatment; vitamin D
Year: 2017 PMID: 29033598 PMCID: PMC5628677 DOI: 10.2147/CCID.S131727
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol ISSN: 1178-7015
Clinical trials evaluating the efficacy of calcipotriol/betamethasone dipropionate combination or treatment regimen
| Study | Study type | n | Intervention | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Douglas et al | DB, R | 1,106 | Treatment with combination, betamethasone dipropionate or calcipotriol twice daily for 4 weeks followed by maintenance with calcipotriol for 4 weeks | The mean percentage decrease in PASI due to the combination (−74.4) was greater than that of the monotherapies (−61.3 betamethasone and −55.3 calcipotriol) |
| Guenther et al | R, DB, VC, PG, DC | 828 | Patients received treatment with combination once daily, combination twice daily, calcipotriol twice daily, or vehicle twice daily for 4 weeks | Use of the combined medication once or twice daily resulted in a significantly greater decrease in PASI than calcipotriol or vehicle only. No significant difference between once- or twice-daily use |
| Kaufmann et al | R, DB | 1,603 | Calcipotriol/betamethasone dripropionate, calcipotriol, betamethasone dipropionate, or vehicle was used once daily for 4 weeks | Comparisons of the combined drug, each monotherapy, and the vehicle alone revealed that the calcipotriol/betamethasone dipropionate combination effectively lowered the mean PASI score more than the vehicle and each monotherapy |
| Papp et al | R, DB, PG | 1,028 | Calcipotriol (50 μg/g)/betamethasone dripropionate (0.5 mg/g), calcipotriol, betamethasone dipropionate, or vehicle (ointment) was used once daily for 4 weeks | There was a significantly larger decrease in PASI due to the combined medication (73.2%) versus the betamethasone dipropionate (63.1%), calcipotriene (48.8%), and vehicle (28.8%) |
| Kragballe et al | DB, DC | 972 | Subjects either used the combination once daily for 8 weeks followed by calcipotriol once daily for 4 weeks; combination once daily for 4 weeks followed by 8 weeks of calcipotriol ointment once daily on weekdays and the combined product once daily at weekends; or, calcipotriol ointment twice daily for 12 weeks | Subjects using the combined medication for 8 weeks daily had the greatest reduction in PASI and showed in the greatest improvement in disease condition at the end of 8 weeks |
| Saraceno et al | DB, R | 96 | Calcipotriol/betamethasone daily for 4 weeks followed by calcipotriol for 8 weeks compared to 12 weeks of calcipotriol alone | Patients using the combined medication for 4 weeks had statistically significant clinical improvement compared with the group that used calcipotriol alone ( |
| Huang et al | R, DB, AC, PG | 320 | Combination once daily with placebo once daily versus calcipotriol twice daily | Subjects using the combination had a greater decrease in psoriasis and PASI after 4 weeks than those using calcipotriol alone |
| Fleming et al | R, PG, DB | 364 | Calcipotriol/betamethasone dipropionate, calcipotriol, betamethasone dipropionate, or vehicle (gel) was used once daily for 8 weeks | The combined medication had a significantly greater percentage of efficacy (27.2%) than the gel vehicle (0.0%), calcipotriol (11.4%), or betamethasone dipropionate (16.9%) monotherapy in gel |
| Ma et al | DB, AC, PG | 80 | Once-daily calcipotriol/betamethasone with once-daily placebo versus twice-daily calcipotriol monotherapy over 12 weeks | Patients using the calcipotriene/betamethasone dipropionate still had greater reduction in PASI, area percentage of lesions, and VAS than those in the calcipotriol monotherapy group |
| Menter et al | R, DB, VC | 1,152 | Calcipotriol/betamethasone dipropionate suspension gel, calcipotriol, and vehicle (gel) were used daily for 8 weeks | After 8 weeks, there was a significantly greater amount of subjects using the combined medication who achieved controlled disease compared to the monotherapy or vehicle arms |
Abbreviations: AC, active-comparator; DB, double-blinded; DC, dose-comparison; PASI, Psoriasis Area and Severity Index; PC, placebo-controlled; PG, parallel-group; R, randomized; VAS, visual analog scale; VC, vehicle-controlled.