| Literature DB >> 29520159 |
Enzo Errichetti1, Matteo Figini1, Margherita Croatto1, Giuseppe Stinco1.
Abstract
Several treatment strategies have been proposed in classic lichen planopilaris (LPP), although no gold standard therapeutic approach has been recognized so far due to the variable and, sometimes, contradictory results reported in the literature, as well as due to the lack of guidelines and randomized controlled trials. In the present review, we sought to provide an updated overview on the treatment of classic LPP by analyzing the level of evidence of published studies, also proposing a possible therapeutic strategy according to the findings highlighted in this systematic review.Entities:
Keywords: lichen planopilaris; management; therapy; treatment
Year: 2018 PMID: 29520159 PMCID: PMC5833781 DOI: 10.2147/CCID.S137870
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol ISSN: 1178-7015
Summary of the reviewed studies regarding treatment options for classic lichen planopilaris
| Study | Type of study | Number of patients | Level of evidence | Associated therapies | Posology | Therapy duration | Outcome |
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| Naeini et al | Randomized clinical trial | 14 | II | None | 400 mg/day | 6 months | Significant LPPAI decrease at months 2 and 4, with only erythema showing significant improvement at month 6 compared with the baseline. Three withdrawn patients |
| Chiang et al | Case series | 29 | IV | None | NA | 12 months | 4% (4 of 29) responders |
| Lyakhovitsky et al | Case series | 25 | IV | None (three patients) | NA | Mean follow-up period: 15.1±3.6 months (all patients) | Partial improvement in inflammation in two cases |
| Topical steroids (17 patients) | NA | Partial and complete improvement in inflammation in seven and three cases, respectively | |||||
| Intralesional steroids (two patients) | NA | Partial improvement in inflammation in one case | |||||
| Topical calcineurin inhibitors (one patient) | NA | Partial improvement in inflammation in one case | |||||
| Oral + topical steroids (two patients) | NA | Partial improvement in inflammation in one case | |||||
| Spencer et al | Case series | 22 | IV | None | 6.5 mg/kg/day | 6–12 months | Nine patients showed improvement |
| Assouly and Reigagne | Case series | 12 | IV | None | 400 mg/day | 6 months | No success |
| Donati et al | Case series | 12 | IV | None | 400 mg/day | 6 months | Eight patients worsened and three responded well to treatment. One patient lost to follow-up. |
| Mehregan et al | Case series | 9 | IV | None | NA | NA | Two patients showed improvement |
| Mirmirani et al | Case series | 3 | IV | Intralesional and topical corticosteroids | NA | NA | No effect |
| Mirmirani and Karnik | Case report | 1 | V | None | 200 mg twice daily | NA | No effect |
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| Naeini et al | Randomized clinical trial | 15 | II | None | 15 mg/week | 6 months | Significant LPPAI decrease at months 2, 4 and 6, with significant improvement in all assessed variables at month 6 compared with the baseline. One withdrawn patient. |
| Spencer et al | Case report | 1 | IV | None | 10 mg/week | 6 months | No improvement |
| Lyakhovitsky et al | Case series | 70 | IV | None (42 patients) | NA | Mean follow-up period: 15.1±3.6 months (all patients) | Partial and complete improvement in inflammation in five and three cases, respectively |
| Hydroxychloroquine (17 patients) | NA | Partial and complete improvement in inflammation in seven and three cases, respectively | |||||
| Oral tetracyclines (eight patients) | NA | Partial improvement in inflammation in three cases | |||||
| Oral retinoids (three patients) | NA | Partial improvement in inflammation in one case | |||||
| Mehregan et al | Case series | 20 | IV | None | NA | NA | 14 responders |
| Chieregato et al | Case series | 30 | IV | None (27 patients) | Twice daily for 21 days, then once daily for 21 days, and finally every other day for 40 days | 12 weeks | Good results in 20 patients and mild improvement in six patients |
| Systemic cyclosporine (two patients) | 5 mg/kg/day for 15 days, then 3 mg/kg/day | 45 days | Improvement: clinical remission and partial regrowth | ||||
| Topical cyclosporine (one patient) | Twice daily for 20 days, then once daily | 60 days | Clinical remission and even partial regrowth on perilesional skin | ||||
| Horn et al | Case series | 2 | IV | Intralesional triamcinolone acetonide | Twice daily | NA | Decrease in symptoms and altering of skin lesion progression |
| None | NA | NA | |||||
| Abbasi and Orlow | Case report | 1 | V | Topical tacrolimus | NA | 2 years | Symptom relief but no clinical improvement |
| Garcovich et al | Case report | 1 | V | Cyclosporine | NA | 7 months | Symptoms relief, but disease progression |
| Isaac and McNeely | Case report | 1 | V | Intralesional corticosteroids, systemic corticosteroids, and griseofulvin | NA | NA | Symptom relief and disease stabilization |
| Jayasekera et al | Case report | 1 | V | None | NA | NA | Improvement |
| Lane et al | Case report | 1 | V | Cyclosporine | Thrice daily | NA | Symptom relief |
| Rosina et al | Case report | 1 | V | None | NA | 40 days | Symptom relief |
| Baibergenova and Walsh | Case series | 24 | IV | None | 15 mg/day | NA | Five patients with remission and 12 experiencing some improvement |
| Spring et al | Case series | 18 | IV | Topical steroids, systemic retinoids, systemic cyproterone acetate, topical minoxidil, finasteride, and/or mycophenolate mofetil | 15 mg/day | 6.1–9.25 months | Two remissions, seven patients experiencing clinical improvement, and nine failures |
| Mesinkovsk et al | Case series | 22 | IV | None | 15 mg/day | Median of 10.5 months | Marked improvement in 16 patients |
| Mirmirani and Karnik | Case report | 1 | V | None | 15 mg/day | 8 months | Improvement |
| Cho et al | Retrospective study of open-label, single-center study | 16 | IV | None | 0.5 g twice daily for 4 weeks, then 1 g twice daily for 20 weeks | Up to 1 year | Ten responders (five complete and five partial) and two treatment failures |
| Spencer et al | Case series | 10 | IV | None | 2–6 g/day | 3–6 months | Three patients showed improvement |
| Assouly and Reigagne | Case series | 5 | IV | None | 2 g/day | 2–8 months | Improvement in two patients |
| Tursen et al | Case report | 1 | V | None for the first 2 months, then triamcinolone acetonide (1 mg/kg per month) | 1 g/day for 2 months, then 500 mg/day for 4 months | 6 months | Marked improvement |
| Mirmirani and Karnik | Case report | 1 | V | None | NA | NA | No effect |
| Spencer et al | Case series | 15 | IV | None | 200 mg/day (doxycycline) | 3–6 months | Four patients showed improvement |
| Lyakhovitsky et al | Case series | 11 | IV | None (one patient) | NA | Mean follow-up period: 15.1±3.6 months (all patients) | Partial improvement |
| Topical steroids (eight patients) | NA | Partial improvement in two patients | |||||
| Intralesional steroid (one patient) | NA | No improvement | |||||
| Topical calcineurin inhibitors (one patient) | NA | No improvement | |||||
| Mehregan et al | Case report | 1 | IV | None | NA | NA | No improvement |
| Ferrara and Byrd | Case report | 1 | V | None | NA | NA | Partial response |
| Mirmirani and Karnik | Case report | 1 | V | None | NA | NA | No effect |
| Lyakhovitsky et al | Case series | 18 | IV | None (15 patients) | NA | Mean follow-up period: 15.1±3.6 months (all patients) | Partial and complete improvement in inflammation in ten cases and one case, respectively |
| Hydroxychloroquine (two patients) | NA | Partial improvement in one patient and complete improvement in one patient | |||||
| Oral tetracycline (one patient) | NA | No improvement | |||||
| Mehregan et al | Case series | 7 | IV | None | NA | NA | No responders |
| Horn et al | Case series | 2 | IV | Topical betamethasone dipropionate 0.05% lotion | 10 mg/mL monthly + twice daily | NA | Decrease in symptoms and altering of skin lesion progression |
| Isaac and McNeely | Case report | 1 | V | Clobetasol propionate + systemic corticosteroids and griseofulvin | 10 mg/mL | NA | Symptom relief and disease stabilization |
| Muñoz-Pérez and Camacho | Case report | 1 | V | None | NA | 8-month follow-up | Improvement, but small areas of permanent alopecia remained |
| Ferrara and Byrd | Case report | 1 | V | None | NA | NA | Partial response |
| Assouly and Reigagne | Case series | 13 | IV | None | 4–5 mg/kg/day | 4 months | Ten patients showed clinical improvement |
| Mirmirani et al | Case series | 3 | IV | None | 3–5 mg/kg/day | 3–5 month | Improvement |
| Mehregan et al | Case series | 2 | IV | None | NA | NA | No improvement |
| Chieregato et al | Case series | 2 | IV | Topical steroids | 5 mg/kg/day for 15 days, then 3 mg/kg/day | 45 days | Improvement |
| Garcovich et al | Case report | 1 | V | Topical betamethasone | 3 mg/kg/day | 7 months | Improvement |
| Lane et al | Case report | 1 | V | Betamethasone valerate 0.12% foam | 3 mg/kg/day twice daily | NA | Partial improvement |
| Assouly and Reigagne | Case series | 6 | IV | None | 25 mg/day | NA | No success |
| Lyakhovitsky et al | Case series | 4 | IV | Topical corticosteroids (three patients) | NA | Mean follow-up period: 15.1±3.6 months (all patients) | Partial improvement (one patient) |
| Topical calcineurin inhibitors (one patient) | NA | No improvement | |||||
| Spencer et al | Case series | 3 | IV | None | 25 mg/day | 3–6 months | Two patients showed improvement |
| Mehregan et al | Case series | 11 | IV | None | 30–40 mg/day for at least 3 months with gradual taper | NA | Improvement in nine patients |
| Lyakhovitsky et al | Case report | 1 | IV | None | NA | NA | No effect |
| Isaac and McNeely | Case report | 1 | V | Intralesional corticosteroids, clobetasol propionate, and griseofulvin | NA | 4–6 weeks | Symptom relief and disease stabilization |
| Ferrara and Byrd | Case report | 1 | V | None | NA | NA | Partial response |
| Mirmirani and Karnik | Case report | 1 | V | None | NA | NA | No effect |
| Mehregan et al | Case series | 10 | IV | None | NA | NA | Five patients showed improvement |
| Isaac and McNeely | Case report | 1 | V | Intralesional corticosteroids, systemic corticosteroids, and clobetasol propionate | 1 g/day | NA | No improvement |
| Metin et al | Case report | 1 | V | None | 12.5 mg/kg/day | 3 months | No benefit |
| Lyakhovitsky et al | Case series | 10 | IV | None (seven patients) | NA | Mean follow-up period: 15.1±3.6 months (all patients) | Partial improvement in inflammation in one case |
| Hydroxychloroquine (one patient) | NA | Partial improvement in inflammation in one case | |||||
| Oral tetracyclines (one patient) | NA | No improvement | |||||
| Oral retinoids (one patient) | NA | No improvement | |||||
| Abbasi and Orlow | Case report | 1 | V | None | NA | 2 years | Symptoms relief, but no clinical improvement |
| Almaani et al | Case report | 1 | V | None | Once daily | 6 months | Little effect |
| Jouanique et al | Case series | 4 | IV | None | 100 mg/day for 1 month, then 200 mg/day | 6 months | No clinical improvement |
| Assouly and Reigagne | Case series | 4 | IV | None | 100 mg/day | 6 months | No success |
| George and Hsu | Case report | 1 | V | None | 150 mg/day for 1 month, then tapered to 50 mg qhs for another month | 2 months | Improvement |
| Vavricka et al | Case report | 13 | IV | None | NA | NA | Improvement in three patients and no effect in the remaining ten subjects |
Abbreviations: LPPAI, Lichen Planopilaris Activity Index; NA, not available
Figure 1Proposed treatment strategy for classic lichen planopilaris.
Notes: *Topical/intralesional steroids may be added to systemic therapies in the case of persistence of limited active areas. §A short course of systemic steroids should be considered only to halt the progression and to improve symptoms in rapidly progressive and severe cases.