APA
Fernández Guarino, Montserrat & Aboin Gonzalez, Sonsoles & Barchino, Lucia & Velazquez, Diana & Arsuaga, Carmen & Lazaro, Pablo (2015 ) .Treatment of moderate and severe adult chronic atopic dermatitis with narrow-band UVB and the combination of narrow-band UVB/UVA phototherapy.
ISO 690
Fernández Guarino, Montserrat & Aboin Gonzalez, Sonsoles & Barchino, Lucia & Velazquez, Diana & Arsuaga, Carmen & Lazaro, Pablo. 2015 .Treatment of moderate and severe adult chronic atopic dermatitis with narrow-band UVB and the combination of narrow-band UVB/UVA phototherapy.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/39632
Résumé:
The phototherapy is a safe and effective technique for the treatment of adult patients with
atopic dermatitis (AD). The treatment of chronic forms of the disease is most often done with narrow band UVB (NB-UVB). There also exist effective phototherapy options against the AD. The aim of this
study was to asses if the combination of NB-UVB with UVA was more effective than the treatment with
only NB-UVB against adult chronic AD. We carried out a prospective and observational study. Adult
patients with chronic AD with more than 50% of the total body surface area affected (TBSA) were
included. The affected TBSA was calculated using the so-called ¿rule of nines.¿ Patients with a clearance
rate >75% of the initial affected TBSA or complete clearance rate were considered as complete response
(CR). An analogue scale from 0 to 10 was used to measure the improvement grade of the pruritus. The
treatments were repeated three times a week. The initial doses of NB-UVB and UVA were determined by
patient¿s phototype. The treatments were performed using a phototherapy booth (UV7002, Walmann,
Villingen-Schwenningen, GermanyVR
) with TL01 and UVA fluorescent lamps. Statistical analysis was
performed with SPSSVR
(IBM, New York, NY) for Windows 21.0. A total of 26 patients with adult chronic
AD were included in the study, 16 patients were treated with UVB-BE and 10 patients with the combined
treatment option NB-UVB/UVA. The mean value of cumulative doses and the mean number of
performed treatments were similar between both groups of patients (p> 0.05). The mean value of
duration of response was significantly higher in the patients treated only with NB-UVB, 101 versus 6.8
months (p 0.05). No differences were observed for the patients that showed complete response
(p 5 0.42) and in the analogue scale of pruritus (p> 0.005). In our study, the patients treated with the
combination of NB-UVB and UVA were similar to the patient that were only treated with NB-UVB e.
Further prospective and controlled studies have to be performed in order to determine the dosing
regimens of phototherapy in adult patients with AD.
KEYWORDS: atopic dermatitis, phototherapy, treatment