| Literature DB >> 33489435 |
Michael E Stuart1, Sheri A Strite1, Kristin Khalaf Gillard2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Hyperhidrosis (excessive sweating) is associated with significant quality-of-life burden yet is often undertreated. With limited FDA-approved treatments, health care providers must determine optimal treatment among approved and off-label options. Key objectives of this review were to reassess, update, and expand a previous systematic review of commonly used treatment options for primary hyperhidrosis, including consideration of aluminum and zirconium compounds.Entities:
Keywords: Hyperhidrosis; comparative effectiveness; evidence-based; strength of evidence; systematic review; within-patient study design
Year: 2020 PMID: 33489435 PMCID: PMC7781989 DOI: 10.1080/21556660.2020.1857149
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Drug Assess ISSN: 2155-6660
Figure 1.Hyperhidrosis treatment options and sites evaluated.
Figure 2.Flowchart on methodology used for assigning RoB and SOE ratings.
Figure 3.Systematic review flowchart.
Figure 4.Overall summary of SOE ratings and evidence synthesis for unique studies identified for appraisal (n = 32)*.
Summary and risk of bias for aluminum salt studies.
| Study and intervention(s) | HH population and design | Risk of bias | Key results/critical appraisal findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flanagan et al. | Axillary | Borderline to high | 33.3% HDSS response rate (≥2 grade improvement) in AC-treated patients at week 4 vs. 91.7% in BTX-A group; 33.3% of AC-treated patients were “very satisfied” at week 4 vs. 87.5% of patients in BTX-A group |
| Flanagan and Glaser | Axillary | High | 72% HDSS responders; 75% somewhat or very satisfied with treatment compared to baseline |
| Goh | Palmar | Unclear | Approximately, two-thirds likely to experience drier palms within 24 h of AC treatment, lasting for 1–2 days |
| Scholes et al. | Axillary | High | Authors state that 64/65 patients had “excellent control of sweating”; however, statements appear to be authors’ interpretation from comments received from 42 patients from one clinic who completed a questionnaire 12 months after the study had concluded |
Abbreviations. AC, Aluminum chloride; AE, Adverse event; BTX-A, Botulinum toxin A; HDSS, Hyperhidrosis Disease Severity Scale; W/P, Within patient.
SOE considered for aluminum chloride body of evidence only.
Summary and risk of bias for anticholinergic agents.
| Study and intervention | HH population and design | Risk of bias | Key results/critical appraisal findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glaser et al. | Axillary | Low | Nearly 75% of patients achieved a ≥50% reduction from baseline in axillary sweat production and 59% achieved a ≥2-point reduction in HDSS score by week 4 with GT (pooled results) |
| Glaser et al. | Axillary | N/A (used for safety only) | N/A for efficacy |
| Hyun et al. | Facial | Moderate | Compared with the placebo-treated sides, topical glycopyrrolate-treated sides showed a reduction in the rate of sweat production at the forehead of 36.68 ± 11.41% on day 10 ( |
| Artzi et al. | Axillary, palmar, plantar | Moderate (LRR) | Palmar hyperhidrosis patients are likely to experience 25% to <50% sweat reduction as assessed by the minor starch-iodine test |
Abbreviations. AE, Adverse event; GT, Glycopyrronium tosylate; HDSS, Hyperhidrosis Disease Severity Scale; LRR, Large response rates; W/P, Within patient.
Summary and risk of bias for botulinum toxin type A studies.
| Study and intervention | HH population and design | Risk of bias | Key results/critical appraisal findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lueangarun et al. | Axillary | Moderate (LRR) | Potential for small short-term benefits of BTX-A cream based on reduced sweat production, expert panel assessments of iodine starch test, HDSS, and patient satisfaction |
| Budamakuntla et al. | Axillary | Moderate (LRR) | Large decrease in sweat rate consistent with HDSS score decrease |
| Montaser-Kouhsari et al. | Axillary | Moderate (LRR) | Iontophoresis of BTX-A reduced sweat production (gravimetry) by 73%, 22%, and 32% after 1 week, 1 month, and 6 months, respectively; injection reduced sweat production by 84%, 76%, and 50%, respectively |
| Yamashita et al. | Palmar | Moderate (LRR) | Quantity of sweat on the treated hand decreased to approximately one-fifth at one month after injection. Sweat quantity increased slightly over time but remained less than half at 6 months after injection; significant difference was observed when compared to before injection. |
| Schnider et al. | Palmar | Moderate (LRR) | Mean sweat reduction of 40% from baseline (digital images) and a 40% improvement using a visual analog scale were reported at 8 weeks ( |
| Lowe et al. | Palmar | Moderate (LRR) | Patients experienced a decrease in sweat production of approximately two thirds with BTX-A injections and about one third with placebo at 28 days; 17/17 rated the treatment as successful in the BTX-A-treated palm vs. 2/17 with placebo ( |
| Glogau | Axillary | Moderate (LRR) | Week 4 gravimetric sweat reduction was 65.3 ± 21.5% (BTX-A) vs. 25.3 ± 66.2% (vehicle; |
| Ibrahim et al. | Axillary | Moderate (LRR) | At month 3, toxin injections decreased sweat production by 72.1% vs. 60.4% for suction-curettage, |
| Naver et al. | Axillary; palmar | Borderline (LRR) | Consistent pattern of improvement in all outcomes |
| Heckmann et al. | Axillary | Low (LRR) | Large (approximately 88%) decrease in mean rate of sweat production at week 2 in botulinum toxin A treated group; at week 24, sweat production was reduced by approximately 65% (open label after 2 weeks) |
Abbreviations. AE, Adverse event; BTX-A, Botulinum toxin A; HDSS, Hyperhidrosis Disease Severity Scale; LRR, Large response rate; W/P, Within patient.
SOE considered for botulinum toxin A injection body of evidence only.
Summary and risk of bias for medical devices that alter eccrine glands.
| Study and intervention | HH population and design | Risk of bias | Key results/critical appraisal findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fatemi Naeini et al. | Axillary (severe) | Moderate | HDSS scores (mean ± SD) at week 21 went from 3.46 at baseline to 1.87 ± 0.61 (FMR) and 3.38 ± 0.49 (control) ( |
| Bechara et al. | Axillary | Moderate | Significant reduction in sweat rate was observed on the laser-treated side (median 89 mg/min vs. 48 mg/min; |
| Nestor and Park | Axillary | Moderate | Study 1: ≥50% of patients achieved a ≥50% reduction in gravimetric sweat production (day 120) |
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| Suh et al. | Axillary | Safety only | Patient reported numbness and weakness in the first and second fingers and decreased ability to abduct his left arm |
| Chang et al. | Axillary | Safety only | Patient experienced severe swelling, numbness and inability to raise her left arm immediately following treatment |
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| Budamakuntla et al. | Axillary | Moderate (LRR) | The mean percent reduction in the resting sweat rate (gravimetry, weighed filter paper) 3 months after BTX-A injections was 80.32% and 3 months after the suction-curettage was 79.79%, |
| Ibrahim et al. | Axillary | Moderate (LRR) | At month 3, toxin injections decreased sweat production by 72.1% vs. 60.4% for suction-curettage, |
| Tronstad et al. | Axillary | Moderate | Five patients withdrew or did not meet for any follow-up examination; 17 subjects analyzed |
Abbreviations. AE, Adverse event; HDSS, Hyperhidrosis Disease Severity Scale; LRR, Large response rate; W/P, Within patient.
SOE considered for tumescent suction curettage body of evidence only.
Summary and risk of bias for iontophoresis studies.
| Study and intervention | HH population and design | Risk of bias | Key results/critical appraisal findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dahl | Palmar | Moderate | Iontophoresis-treated patients achieved a median reduction in sweating compared to the untreated side of 38% ( |
| Karakoc et al. | Palmoplantar | Moderate | Significant change only with direct current iontophoresis treatment (baseline sweating rate approximately 3 g/h and post-treatment sweating rate <0.5 g/h, i.e. more than 80% reduction), but not with alternating current sham treatment suggesting that direct electrical current iontophoresis for palmoplantar HH is effective in reducing sweat intensity |
| Stolman | Palmar | Borderline | “Marked reduction” in sweating of the treated hand was reported by 15/18 treated subjects compared to no reduction in the untreated hand |
| Na et al. | Palmar | Borderline | Patients treated with 5–25 mA for 30 min daily for 1 week, then every other day for 1 week with dry-type iontophoresis reported a sweat reduction of 33–51% (average 42.7% reduction in treated palm vs. 1.8% in untreated palm) of baseline |
| Choi et al. | Palmar | Safety only | N/A for efficacy |
| Kim et al. | Palmar | High | 85–90% of patients receiving iontophoresis may achieve grade 2 or 3 (mild or moderate) improvement on the starch-iodine test at 2 and 3 weeks compared to approximately 30% of patients receiving sham treatment at week 2 and 15% of sham treatment patients at week 3 |
Abbreviations. AE, Adverse event; HDSS, Hyperhidrosis Disease Severity Scale; LRR, Large response rate; W/P, Within patient.