1. Systematic review and practical guidance on the use of topical calcipotriol and topical calcipotriol with betamethasone dipropionate as long‐term therapy for mild‐to‐moderate plaque psoriasis
- Author
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Jiang An Zhang, Ma. Lorna F. Frez, Yi Zhao, Pravit Asawanonda, Dong Hyun Kim, Colin Theng, Akihiko Asahina, Liangchun Wang, Sameer Zimmo, and Shinichi Imafuku
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,MEDLINE ,Betamethasone dipropionate ,Dermatology ,Betamethasone ,law.invention ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Calcitriol ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Psoriasis ,Humans ,Medicine ,Calcipotriol ,business.industry ,Primary care physician ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,Drug Combinations ,Regimen ,Treatment Outcome ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Dermatologic Agents ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
While many patients with psoriasis are candidates for topical agents, long-term treatment effects are unclear. This systematic review evaluated global findings from clinical trials and real-world studies of topical calcipotriol and the two-compound formulation of calcipotriol and betamethasone dipropionate for mild-to-moderate plaque psoriasis (including scalp psoriasis). PubMed, Embase and MEDLINE were searched for relevant English-language publications along with Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Latin American publication databases. Identified articles were screened by title and abstract against predefined inclusion/exclusion criteria. A narrative synthesis of key efficacy and safety findings from the full papers of selected publications was developed. Thirty-seven relevant papers were identified (25 English, 11 Chinese and one Japanese-language study) including 28 randomized controlled trials. While there was significant heterogeneity in study length, treatment intensity and clinical measures, following a critical review of the published data combined with expert opinion, the following clinical practice recommendations were agreed in order to assist healthcare providers: in adults, long-term treatment with calcipotriol/betamethasone dipropionate is well tolerated and efficacious for up to 1 year on an 'as needed' basis, and for up to 16 weeks on a fixed-treatment regimen. Calcipotriol is also well tolerated and efficacious when used long term (up to 52 weeks) 'as needed' and for up to 20 weeks on a fixed-treatment regimen. Used on an 'as needed' basis for up to 1 year, the safety and efficacy profile of fixed-dose combination calcipotriol/betamethasone dipropionate is more favorable than calcipotriol alone; regular consultation between patients and their dermatologist/primary care physician is required to review psoriasis symptoms and adjust treatment accordingly; a specific treatment goal should be agreed on initiation of topical agent(s) to determine when long-term treatment can begin or if a regimen change is warranted; and application frequency during the continued treatment phase should consider the patients' treatment expectations and goals.
- Published
- 2021