| Literature DB >> 32200513 |
Mutong Zhao1, Yuan Liang1, Chunping Shen1, Ying Wang2, Lin Ma3, Xiuhua Ma4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Patient education is crucial for improving disease outcomes in atopic dermatitis (AD). This review aims to summarize evidence about the effectiveness of educational programs for parents of pediatric AD patients.Entities:
Keywords: Atopic dermatitis; Education; Meta-analysis; Parental education; Pediatric; Systematic review
Year: 2020 PMID: 32200513 PMCID: PMC7211777 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-020-00365-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Fig. 1Flow diagram of study selection. SCORAD Scoring of Atopic Dermatitis, DFI Dermatitis Family Index, IDQOL Infants’ Dermatitis Quality of Life, CDLQI Children’s Dermatology Life Quality Index, RCT randomized controlled trial
Characteristics of the studies included in the systematic review
| References | Year | Age (years) | Follow-up | Treatment/control, no. | Treatment | Control | Disease severity | Contents | Outcome measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Singer [ | 2018 | 0.3–3.8 | 42 days or until follow-up appointment | 14/16 | Daily educational text messages | Standard care | Unclear | Disease burden; precipitators; skin care | (1) EASI |
| Liang [ | 2018 | 4–14 | 6 months | 293/249 | Four weekly lectures | Unclear | Moderate to severe | Long-term management, food allergy, psychological management, skin care | (1) SCORAD; (2) IDQOL, CDLQI; (3) Knowledge assessment questionnaire |
| Pustisek [ | 2016 | 0.25–12 | 2 months | 64/64 | One-time lecture with written material | Standard care | Moderate to severe | Precipitators, diet, diagnosis and treatment, skin care, quality of life impacts and managements, practical session | (1) SCORAD; (2) FDLQI; (3) STAI and PPS |
| Staab [ | 2006 | 0.25–7 | 12 months | 274/244 | Six weekly group sessions | Standard care | Moderate to severe | Basic medical information, psychological management, food allergy and nutrition, skin care | (1) SCORAD and PO-SCORAD; (2) Parents’ quality of life questionnaire; (3) Itch questionnaires JUCKKI and JUCKJU as age indicated |
| 8–12 | 102/83 | ||||||||
| 13–18 | 70/50 | ||||||||
| Futamura [ | 2013 | 0.5–6 | 6 months | 29/30 | Two continuous days of group meeting with information booklet | Standard care and information booklet | Moderate to severe | Basic medical information, treatments and adverse effects, allergen and avoidance, skin care | (1) SCORAD and PO-SCORAD; (2) Questionnaire on scores for pruritus, sleeplessness and corticosteroid anxiety; (3) DFI |
| Grillo [ | 2006 | 0–16 | 12 weeks | 32/29 | One-time workshop | Standard care | Unlimited | Basic medical information, precipitators, skin care, practical session | (1) Objective SCORAD; (2) DFI, CDLQI, and IDQOL |
| Shaw [ | 2008 | 0–18 | The 1 or 3 month follow-up appointment determined by severity | 51/55 | One-time individualized education | Unclear | Unlimited | Medical treatment, skin care, allergen avoidance, pruritus reliefs, lifestyle managements | (1) SCORAD; (2) CDLQI, and IDQOL |
| Chinn [ | 2002 | 0.5–4 | 12 weeks | 55/42 | One-time session | Unclear | Unclear | Basic medical information; treatment application; skin care | (1) CDLQI or IDQOL and DFI |
| 4–16 | 50/50 | ||||||||
| Weber [ | 2008 | 2–16 | 24 months | 16/16 | Fortnightly support group for 6 months | Unclear | Moderate to severe | Overview of the disease and treatment followed by discussion | (1) CDLQI and DFI; (2) McGill pain questionnaire for pruritus assessment |
| Moore [ | 2009 | < 16 | 4 weeks | 49/50 | One-time individual consultation with information booklets | Standard care | Unlimited | Basic medical information, precipitator avoidance, treatments and information booklet | (1) SCORAD |
| Schuttelaar [ | 2010 | < 4 | 12 months | 37/34 | One-time group session or education during individual follow-up visits | Standard care | Unlimited | Basic medical information, allergies, skin care, practical session and written action plan | (1) SCORAD and objective SCORAD; (2) CDLQI or IDQOL and DFI; (3) Program satisfaction |
| 4–16 | 35/35 | ||||||||
| Saritha [ | 2018 | 0–16 | 6 weeks | 5/5 | Video on AD | Video on a placebo topic | Unclear | Unclear | (1) Topical steroid phobia and adherence; (2) EASI |
| Park [ | 2017 | 0.3–4.3 | 1 week | 10/11 | One-time video tape with tailored leaflet | Same video tape without tailored leaflet | Mild to moderate | Skin care and tailored ideal amount of moisturizer | (1) Moisturizer usage; (2) EASI |
EASI eczema area and severity index, SCORAD Scoring of Atopic Dermatitis, CDLQI Children’s Dermatology Life Quality Index, IDQOL Infants’ Dermatology Quality of Life Index, DLQI Dermatology Life Quality Index, PO-SCORAD Patient Oriented SCORAD; FDLQI Family Dermatitis Life Quality Index, STAI State Trait Anxiety Inventory, PPS Perceived Stress Scale, DLQI Dermatitis Life Quality Index, QoLIAD Quality of Life Index for Atopic Dermatitis, BDI Beck Depression Inventory, EQ-5D EuroQol 5-Dimension, POEM patient-oriented eczema measure, HADS-D Hospital Anxiety and Depression Score, DFI Dermatitis Family Impact, RCT randomized control trial, JUCKKI/JUCKJU Itching cognitions questionnaires
Fig. 2Standardized mean difference (SMD) for Scoring of Atopic Dermatitis (SCORAD, a), Dermatitis Family Index (DFI, b), Infants’ Dermatitis Quality of Life (IDQOL, c), and Children’s Dermatology Life Quality Index (CDLQI, d) at the end of study. The dots represent point estimates of SMD while the horizontal lines represent the 95% CI for the SMD. The size of the square around each SMD is proportional to the study weight. I2 represents the degree of heterogeneity in the included studies. The pooled SMD (diamond) was calculated using a random effects model
Subgroup analyses of RCTs included in the meta-analyses of SCORAD
| Parameters | Studies, no. | Treatment/control, no. | SMD (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency* | < 0.01 | ||||
| One single session [ | 4 | 174/173 | − 12.11 (− 14.83, − 9.39) | 0.0 | |
| Cumulative sessions [ | 2 | 739/626 | − 5.88 (− 9.36, − 2.40) | 73.5 | |
| Follow-up duration, months* | < 0.01 | ||||
| < 6 [ | 3 | 840/725 | − 11.97 (− 15.28, − 8.65) | 0.0 | |
| ≥ 6 [ | 4 | 145/143 | − 6.45 (− 9.63, − 3.27) | 77.0 | |
| Disease severity | 0.71 | ||||
| Moderate to severe AD [ | 4 | 832/720 | − 8.19 (− 11.99, − 4.38) | 82.3 | |
| Unlimited [ | 3 | 153/148 | − 8.74 (− 15.55, − 1.94) | 78.0 | |
| Delivery | 0.1 | ||||
| Tailored individual session [ | 1 | 49/50 | − 9.93 (− 14.57, − 5.29) | – | |
| Group session [ | 6 | 936/818 | − 8.03 (− 11.35, − 4.70) | 79.8 | |
Based on total SCORAD
AD atopic dermatitis, SMD standardized mean difference, CI confidence interval, SCORAD Scoring of Atopic Dermatitis
*Between subgroup Q statistics significant (P < 0.1)
| Atopic dermatitis parental education of pediatric patients is associated with a significant reduction in disease severity and thus should be implemented into daily clinical practice. |
| Atopic dermatitis educational programs are encouraged to incorporate the following areas of focus: skincare, diet, psychological managements, and topical steroid usage. |
| Follow-up duration modifies the effect with longer follow-up showing inferior results, indicating that iterations of implementation might be promising in providing long-standing benefits. |
| The existing body of evidence was rate as very low to moderate for certainty due to risk for performance and detection bias. |
| Contamination was likely due to the single center design of the studies included, suggesting that the true effect might be even larger. |