| Literature DB >> 29922163 |
Rahul P Patel1, Madhur D Shastri2, Long Chiau Ming1,3,4, Syed Tabish R Zaidi1, Gregory M Peterson1.
Abstract
Lichen planus (LP) is an uncommon mucocutaneous inflammatory condition, that is immunologically mediated, typically pruritic and often recurs. The currently advocated therapies are either not highly effective or associated with severe side effects. Enoxaparin, a widely used anticoagulant, is composed of both anticoagulant and non-anticoagulant fragments. Enoxaparin is reported to have anti-inflammatory properties and it was found to be effective in LP. However, the results from clinical studies have varied substantially and, therefore, the clinical role of enoxaparin in LP remains uncertain. This review focuses on potential reasons for the reported inconsistent outcomes, as well as proposing solutions; these include identifying batch-to-batch inconsistency in the composition of enoxaparin. The potential therapeutic value of enoxaparin in LP must be explored using well-designed clinical trials, combined with experimental studies that focus on identifying the anti-inflammatory fragments of enoxaparin and elucidating the mechanism of action of these non-anticoagulant fragments.Entities:
Keywords: anti-inflammatory; batch-to-batch variation; chromatography; enoxaparin; heparin; lichen planus; non-anticoagulant; response
Year: 2018 PMID: 29922163 PMCID: PMC5996198 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2018.00586
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Studies investigating the clinical efficacy of subcutaneous enoxaparin in patients with lichen planus (LP).
| Author | Year | Study design | Patients | No. of patients | Enoxaparin dose/duration | Previous treatment | Clinical effect | Side effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pilot | Histopathologically proven LP with intense pruritus for 2–36 months. One patient had palmoplantar involvement and 4 had oral lesions | 10 | 3 mg once weekly for 4 or 6 weeks | Topical corticosteroids and oral H1 blockers | Eight patients achieved a complete remission; one patient had marked clinical improvement; no clinical effect was observed in one patient | No side effects were observed | ||
| Open-label | Hypertrophic LP, disseminated LP, disseminated and reticular oral LP, localized LP, localized and reticular oral LP, erosive oral LP or disseminated and erosive oral LP | 18 | 3 mg once weekly for 6–13 weeks | Topical corticosteroids and/or systemic corticosteroids and/or cyclosporine and/or retinoids | 11 of 18 patients achieved a complete remission; two achieved marked improvement; 5 patients showed no change | No side effects were observed | ||
| Case series | Oral LP, lichen planopilaris, erosive genital LP, generalized eruptive LP | 7 | 30 mg once a day for 6 months or once a week for 4, 6, or 12 weeks or once every other day for 1 or 4 months or once a week for 10 weeks | Topical and or systemic corticosteroids | 5 of 7 patients experienced a marked improvement and 2 patients had no clinical improvement | No side effects were observed | ||
| Open-label | Histopathologically proven LP with or without associated oral lesions | 10 | 3 mg once weekly for 6 weeks | Previously untreated patients | Complete remission was not seen in any patients. Clinical response was seen in only 2 of 10 patients | 1 patient developed skin necrosis after the 4th injection and one patient developed multiple lesions over both lower and upper extremities with increased itching after the fourth injection | ||
| Open-label | Histopathologically proven disseminated LP, disseminated with papular LP, localized LP, localized with papular LP, hypertrophic LP or localized with hypertrophic LP | 7 | 5 mg once a week for 6 weeks | Topical and/or systemic corticosteroids, PUVA, sedatives and systemic anti-histamines | 6 of 7 patients had no histological changes. 5 of 7 patients had no clinical improvement and itching decreased in 2 patients | No side effects were observed | ||
| Open-label | Histopathologically proven LP with intense pruritus. Patients had either disseminated, disseminated with reticulated oral LP or hypertrophic LP | 24 | 3 mg once a week for maximum 14 weeks | Topical and/or systemic corticosteroids | 20 of 24 patients achieved a complete remission and 4 patients had no or minimal clinical effect | No side effects were observed | ||
| Case study | Patient with ulcerative LP and hepatitis C | 1 | 30 mg biweekly for the first 2 weeks and then 3 mg biweekly for the next 4 weeks | Topical corticosteroid and topical immunosuppressant | Complete remission of the lesions and the patient was in remission for 18 months. A slight flare of LP on the palm was developed later on which was controlled with topical treatment of corticosteroid and immunosuppressant | No side effects were observed | ||
| Open-label | Patients with recalcitrant LP | 15 | 3 mg once a week for a period of 20 weeks | Topical and systemic corticosteroids | 2 of 15 patients with mild form of LP had complete remission of the lesions. 13 of 15 patients with moderate or severe LP did not achieve complete remission. 13 of 15 patients reported significant reduction in itching | No side effects were observed | ||
| Case series | Palmoplantar hyperkeratotic variant of LP | 2 | 3 mg once a week for 12 weeks | Not specified | Skin lesions were healed in both the patients but oral mucosal lesions remained stable | No side effects were observed | ||
| Ucmak et al. | 2012 | Open-label | LP - Type of LP not specified | 21 | 3 mg once a week for 12 weeks | Systemic or local treatment - pharmacological agent not specified | 15 of 21 patients showed perfect recovery and 4 out of 21 patients showed distinct recovery; The terms “perfect recovery” and “distinct recovery” were not defined by the authors | No side effects were observed |
| Open-label | Cutaneous LP | 37 | 3 mg once a week for 6 weeks | Not specified | Improvement in papular eruption, scaly lesions and pigmentation; Complete remission was not observed in any of the enoxaparin-treated patients | 8 of 37 patients suffered from local bruises and headache | ||
| Multicentre randomized clinical study | Disseminated LP | 25 | 5 mg once a week until complete remission or a maximum of 8 weeks | Not specified | 8 (32%) patients had complete remission, 10 (40%) patients had partial improvement and 7 patients (28%) had no improvement | No side effects were observed in 24 patients and one patient suffered from a rash of new lesions at the injection site | ||
| Non-randomized controlled clinical study | Generalized LP | 20 | 5 mg once a week for 16 to 24 weeks | Topical corticosteroid, antihistamines or emollients | 13 patients had complete remission of skin lesions. However, 7 patients showed relapse after discontinuation of enoxaparin | No side effects were observed |